A "white dwarf " star is the most likely. However but you could also get a neutron star or possibly a black hole. It depends on the mass of the original star.
A collapsed vein cannot restore or repair itself over time, but the body grows other smaller veins near the damaged ones.
Neutron Stars are stars that have collapsed to the point where electrons and protons are smashed together.
The mine that collapsed in Chile in August 2010 was called the San Jose mine.
white dwarf
It depends. Most black holes have masses comparable to massive stars, but their event horizons are much smaller, a few tens of miles across. Supermassive black holes can have enormous event horizons, some larger than our solar system.
A collapsed star is a term used to describe a "dead" star, which is a star that has come to the end of its lifetime and just collapses on itself. A black hole
no yubvo
A black hole is a star that has died violently and has collapsed in on itself.
A massive collapsed star is a dead star.
A collapsed star is a term used to describe a "dead" star, which is a star that has come to the end of its lifetime and just collapses on itself. A black hole
their black and they have tremendous gravity, due to them being a collapsed star that have imploded onto itself.
A neutron star, or in an even more extreme case, a black hole.
A star that has collapsed under gravity and is made of neutrons is called a neutron star. Neutron stars are extremely dense and have a strong gravitational pull due to the collapsed core of a massive star. They are the remnants of supernova explosions.
It collapsed.
It seems you are referring not to any collapsed star, but a black hole. The "event horizon" is the area from which nothing can escape.
It contains the entire collapsed star, however the star has collapsed to an infinitesimal point (or infinitesimally thin ring if its spinning) singularity, leaving everything around that totally empty except for warped spacetime (which is what causes gravity).
Yes. A black hole is a collapsed star.