The strong gravity that made them collapse in the first place keeps them together.
Stars explode into supernovae, which can leave behind remnants like neutron stars or black holes. During the explosion, elements heavier than iron are forged through nucleosynthesis and dispersed into space, enriching the interstellar medium with these elements.
Dead stars are not necessarily black holes. Dead stars can become white dwarfs, neutron stars, or black holes depending on their mass. Only the most massive dead stars can collapse further to become black holes if they exceed the Chandrasekhar limit, around 1.4 times the mass of the Sun.
False. Only the most massive stars will become black holes.
The most massive stars will die as black holes.
no, dwarf stars don't have enough mass
"explode as supernovae". These are called Type II supernovae and sometimes a neutron star is formed, not a black hole.
Stars explode into supernovae, which can leave behind remnants like neutron stars or black holes. During the explosion, elements heavier than iron are forged through nucleosynthesis and dispersed into space, enriching the interstellar medium with these elements.
Dead stars are not necessarily black holes. Dead stars can become white dwarfs, neutron stars, or black holes depending on their mass. Only the most massive dead stars can collapse further to become black holes if they exceed the Chandrasekhar limit, around 1.4 times the mass of the Sun.
stars explode
When smaller stars explode (like our Sun), they leave a nebula cloud by releasing their gas and they become a small but dense white dwarf star.When big stars explode (like Betelgeuse), they have a massive explosion called a supernova and the core of the star turns into a black hole or a pulsar.
Yes actually. But it well basically take billions of years for a hyper-novae star to explode and form. And supernovae do not form Black Holes, they make quasars or neutron stars. Hypernovae- a result of a hyper-class star to explode- will leave a black hole.
No. Black holes are the remnants left behind when the very largest stars die.
The most massive stars become black holes.
They are called "black holes".
Stars can be sucked into black holes.
Yes. When the most massive stars die, their cores collapse to form black holes.
stellar black holes were stars (these are large)primordial black holes were pieces of the big bang (these are microscopic)