Massive Stars





MASSIVE STARS HAVE A MASS AT LEAST THREE TIMES that of the Sun, and some stars area as massive as about  50 Suns. A Massive  star evolves in a similar way to a small star until it reaches the main sequences stages. During its life as a main sequences star, it shines steadily until the hydrogen in its core has fused to form helium. This process takes billions of years in a small star, but only millions of years in a massive star. A massive star then becomes a red supergiant, which initially consists of a helium core surrounded by outer layers of cooling, expanding gas. Over the next few millions years , a series of nuclear reactions form different elements in shells around an iron core.



The core eventually collapses in less than a second, causing a massive explosion called a supernova, in which a shock wave blows away the outer layers of the star. Supernova shine brighter than an entire galaxy for a short time. Sometimes, the core survives the supernova explosion. If the surviving core is between about one and a half and three solar masses, it contracts to become a tiny, dense neutron star. If the core is greater than three solar masses, it contracts to become a black hole 

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