depends on how strong.... when a massive star's life ends and it collapses on itself extremely quickly... it forms a black hole and the black hole has an EXTREMELY strong gravitational pull..... so i think the answer is black hole
When the star stops producing energy, there is no more radiation pressure to offset the gravitation. In this case (if the remaining mass of the star is big enough), it will collapse to a black hole.
When the star stops producing energy, there is no more radiation pressure to offset the gravitation. In this case (if the remaining mass of the star is big enough), it will collapse to a black hole.
A massive collapsed star is a dead star.
Neutron Star
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.
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
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.
A collapsed star after using its fuel is called a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole, depending on its mass. White dwarfs are remnants of low to medium-mass stars, while neutron stars are remnants of massive stars. Black holes are formed from the most massive stars and have gravitational pull strong enough to trap even light.
That refers specifically to black holes (there are other types of "collapsed stars"). This sphere is called the "event horizon".