Like all main sequence stars, a red dwarf is powered by the fusion of hydrogen into helium.
No, the sun has about 5 billion years left before it exhausts its nuclear fuel and swells as a red giant, likely engulfing Mercury and Venus in the process. After that, it will shed its outer layers and become a white dwarf. The sun will not "burn out" in the conventional sense.
According to prevailing astronomical theory, red dwarfs do not become supernovae, so the best answer to the question is "nonexistant."
A black dwarf does not burn anything. A black dwarf is the cooled remnant of a dead star.
It will first become a red giant, then turn into a white dwarf and in billions and billions of years it will become a black dwarf.
About 0.5 AU, or about half the distance from Earth to the sun.
A red dwarf star is smaller, dimmer, and cooler than our sun.
1. The sun is bigger then the red dwarf.2. The sun produces bright electric-like light unlike the red dwarfs dim elctric-like light.3. The sun is highly recognized in our solar system, but the red dwarf is not.
White Dwarf, Sun, Red Giant, Supernova
Proxima centauri is the closest red dwarf star and is the closest star
Yes. A red dwarf
Will the sun explode? No. Will it burn out? Yes. It will gradually expand into a red giant, in about 4 billion years, then collapse to a bright hot white dwarf star, where it will burn another few billion years, gradually fading to black.
The sun will be a red giant for about 1 billion years before transitioning into a white dwarf.
because when the sun hit's it it burn's and goes all red if you were talking about sun burn.
Only a red dwarf star is red. Our Sun is a yellow dwarf. A red dwarf is red because it is cool, and cool colours are red whereas hot colours are white and blue.
A red dwarf fuses hydrogen into helium, just like any star, albeit at a very conservative rate.
Both the sun and a red dwarf are main sequence stars that produce heat and light by fusing hydrogen in their core and turning it into helium.
Yes, eventually the sun will burn out. Current estimates suggest this won't happen for another 5 billion years. When it does, the sun will swell into a red giant, consuming Mercury and Venus, before eventually shrinking into a white dwarf.