Two cubic meters of neutron star would have a mass of about 10^18 (1 quintillion) kilograms or about 1 quadrillion metric tons.
A neutron star is a stellar remnant
Yes. A pulsar is a rapidly spinning neutron star.
A neutron star is smaller, but has a greater mass. A typical white dwarf is about the size of a terrestrial planet. A typical neutron star is a few miles across.
A neutron star is so dense, that apart from a direct collision from another neutron star, the chances are slim to impossible.
No, a neutron star is not 100% neutrons. The outer portion of a neutron star may consist of a crust of iron nuclei and electrons.
Good sentence for neutron star - WOW ! see that;s a neutron star !!
Good sentence for neutron star - WOW ! see that;s a neutron star !!
Neutron stars do not have fuel. A neutron star is a remnant of a star that has already died.
No. A neutron star ts the remnant of a massive star that exploded.
A neutron star is a stellar remnant
It is still called a neutron star. Depending on how we observe it, it may also be called a pulsar.
A young neutron star. Really - that is what a neutron star is. If the neutron star's magnetic field is pointed towards Earth, then it is referred to as a pulsar - because of it's rapid pulsations [See related question] but it is still a neutron star.
Yes. A pulsar is a rapidly spinning neutron star.
Pulsars are not only a kind of neutron star, they are neutron stars. See related question.
A neutron star! A neutron star is actually just a great bundle of neutrons (remember the atom: proton +, electron -, and neutron no charge). As a great star (about 8x the mass of the sun) collapses in upon its own weight after running out of fuel, it literally has enough energy to force the electrons and protons together to form neutrons.
The name "neutron star" some from the fact that the neutron star is mainly composed of neutrons. The gravitational pull of a neutron star is so strong that most matter are crushed into neutrons.
The neutron star hasn't atoms.