Initially the sun will swell up into a red giant shedding her out layers until she shrinks. When it dies out it will turn into a heavy and useless white dwarf and earth will be frozen and unlivable.
The death stage. It explodes and either collapses into a neutron star or collapses even more into a black hole in space.
A star that explodes and temporarily increases its brightness by 100,000 times or more is known as a supernova. This catastrophic event occurs at the end of a star's life cycle, typically for massive stars, when they can no longer sustain nuclear fusion, leading to a rapid collapse and subsequent explosion. During a supernova, the energy released can outshine an entire galaxy for a brief period. These explosions play a crucial role in dispersing elements into space, contributing to the formation of new stars and planets.
The Teardrop Explodes ended in 1982.
A star that explodes and temporarily increases its brightness by 100,000 times or more is known as a supernova. This catastrophic event occurs at the end of a star's life cycle, typically in massive stars, when they exhaust their nuclear fuel and undergo a core collapse or a thermonuclear explosion. The resulting explosion releases an immense amount of energy, briefly outshining entire galaxies and scattering heavy elements into space. Supernovae play a crucial role in the chemical evolution of the universe by enriching the interstellar medium with these elements.
Yes, a low mass star will end its life cycle as a white dwarf. After exhausting its nuclear fuel, the star will shed its outer layers to form a planetary nebula, leaving behind the dense core known as a white dwarf.
Supervernova
When a star explodes, that's the end of the star. The stellar remnant - either a neutron star or a black hole is created instantly.
The death stage. It explodes and either collapses into a neutron star or collapses even more into a black hole in space.
A nebula contains stars and other matter; a supernova is just a large enough nova, or star that explodes at the end of its life cycle due to spent fuel
The death of a star is called a supernova or stellar explosion. This is a catastrophic event that occurs when a star reaches the end of its life cycle and can result in the star either collapsing into a dense core (neutron star or black hole) or completely exploding.
The Teardrop Explodes ended in 1982.
The average star will become a white dwarf at the end of its life.
Yes, a low mass star will end its life cycle as a white dwarf. After exhausting its nuclear fuel, the star will shed its outer layers to form a planetary nebula, leaving behind the dense core known as a white dwarf.
The mass of the star.
Well, a nova is basically the end of a star's life. It's when a star explodes- when it explodes and dies at an even large rate, it's called a supernova. The reasons why stars die and explode in a nova or a supernova is because the stars have used up all their gases over a long, long period of time. So a lot of the stars you look up and see at night could already be dead stars.
Uranium is primarily produced in stars through the process of nucleosynthesis, where lighter elements are fused together under the extreme temperatures and pressures within a star's core. This process involves a series of nuclear reactions that eventually lead to the creation of heavier elements like uranium. When the star reaches the end of its life cycle and explodes in a supernova, these newly formed elements are dispersed into space, where they can later be incorporated into planet-forming processes.
No, a protostar is basically the BEGINNING of a star's life cycle.