pompomzzzx

PT3
          	I love how it works it’s so amazing to me. Our sun has a few billion years left to go I’m pretty sure, yeah, I just searched it up. About 5 billion years to go. So, different like thing about stars here: how they’re formed and get made. So basically, most stars are made up of helium and hydrogen. They can be made of other things, which is a whole different discussion on its own, so for now I’ll just say what I wanted to say. Stars start off from a nebula, which is a bunch of dust and gas, and they collectively come together, and a star is born. Now, once this star is born, it’ll grow, and you know, become old. Just like humans. At one point, it’ll be on the main sequence, and then it’ll have its supergiant phase, where it’s big and gives off a bunch of heat and gas. Now, at this point it can either become a white dwarf and die as a black dwarf, or it’ll become a supernova and explode, then become a neutron star or a black hole!
          	

pompomzzzx

PT3
          I love how it works it’s so amazing to me. Our sun has a few billion years left to go I’m pretty sure, yeah, I just searched it up. About 5 billion years to go. So, different like thing about stars here: how they’re formed and get made. So basically, most stars are made up of helium and hydrogen. They can be made of other things, which is a whole different discussion on its own, so for now I’ll just say what I wanted to say. Stars start off from a nebula, which is a bunch of dust and gas, and they collectively come together, and a star is born. Now, once this star is born, it’ll grow, and you know, become old. Just like humans. At one point, it’ll be on the main sequence, and then it’ll have its supergiant phase, where it’s big and gives off a bunch of heat and gas. Now, at this point it can either become a white dwarf and die as a black dwarf, or it’ll become a supernova and explode, then become a neutron star or a black hole!
          

pompomzzzx

PT2
          
          Its brightness is 1 on the scale. It’s about 16,800 degrees Fahrenheit I believe, I forget, but anyway, there’s a bunch of stars that are bigger than our star. But fun fact: our sun is the only star in our (the Milky Way) galaxy. Every other star you see in the sky are big big stars that are bright enough and are many light years away for us to see, but in our universe. Our galaxy is something else. The universe has many other galaxies, and they theorize that there’s others outside of our universe, with other universes. Hence the term, “multiverse” that’s why many sci-fi movies and shows have multiverses because of that theory. Back to the stars, based on their size and mass, will determine their lifetime. Bigger stars have shorter lifetimes because they burn more gas, therefore they’ll get tinier faster. Once a star dies down, they become a white dwarf, and then once that dies, it can become a black dwarf, or it can explode into the universe and make a whole new star.

pompomzzzx

PT1 
          For @MitsubaTheSilly_17
          
          Sorry if this is incorrect I made it a year ago, I don’t remember any of it but I’m sure I did when I was learning it
          
          There’s a scale for stars that shows their size, color, star type, distance from earth, and luminance (aka brightness, Ik, big words) and there’s a bunch of types of stars: red giants, blue giants (which are rare), red supergiants, white dwarf, black dwarfs, and the main sequence stars. The main sequence stars is where our sun is.
          
          PART 1