Notes using the foldable Life Cycle of a Star Notes using the foldable
How long a star lives depends on the mass Life Cycle of a Star Nebula The smaller the stars, the longer the life because they use up their fuel more slowly Protostar Red Dwarf Yellow Star Blue Giant Red Super Giant Red Giant Supernova White Dwarf Black Dwarf Black Hole Neutron Star
Nebula All stars begin as parts of nebulas A large cloud of gas and dust large amount of gas in a small volume, very dense
Different Masses mean different types of stars Protostar The 1st stage of a star’s life A contracting cloud of gas and dust Pressure and heat start nuclear fusion Different Masses mean different types of stars
Mass of star How long a star lives depends on how much mass it has A small mass star uses less fuel so it lasts longer so . . . The smaller the mass the longer it lasts
Red Dwarf A small mass star Can last up to 200 billion years
Yellow Star A medium mass star Our sun is a yellow star Lives for 10 billion years
Blue Giant A large mass star 10-15 times larger than the sun VERY hot Short lives because they have used up a lot of fuel
Red Giant The star runs out of fuel outer parts expand, then the core shrinks It turns red as it is cooling This phase will last until the star exhausts its remaining fuel. The pressure of the nuclear reaction is not strong enough to equalize the force of gravity so the star will collapse.
Red Super Giant The star runs out of fuel The core shrinks and the outer parts expand It turns red as it is cooling This phase will last until the star exhausts its remaining fuel. The pressure of the nuclear reaction is not strong enough to equalize the force of gravity so the star will collapse.
White Dwarf No more fuel left Faint glow from left over energy Outer parts drift out into space Small blue white hot core is left About the size of Earth
Supernova As the core shrinks, pressure increases Results in an explosion
Black Dwarf When the white dwarf stops glowing it is dead\very dense
Black Hole Remains of explosion collapse into a black hole Most large mass stars turn into black holes
Neutron Star After explosion some material left behind Forms a neutron star Dense and small