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Name ________________________________________ Date __________ Per _____ Doc ____ Lives of Stars WS Each star is born, goes through its life cycle, and dies. Astronomers can’t watch a single star for billions of years so they study many stars in different stages of their lives and see how they differ from one another. A nebula is a large amount of gas and dust spread out in a huge volume. Gravity pulls some of the gas and dust together. This contracting matter is then called a protostar. A protostar is the earliest stage of a star’s life. A star is born when the contracting gas and dust becomes so hot that nuclear fusion starts. During nuclear fusion, atomic nuclei of low atomic number elements fuse to form a heavier nucleus of a larger element. Energy is released as a result. How long a star lives depends on how much mass it has. Small stars use their fuel more slowly than large stars, so they have much longer lives. When a star begins to run out of hydrogen fuel, the star becomes a red giant. When a star runs out of fuel, it becomes a white dwarf, a neutron star, a pulsar, or a black hole. When small-mass or medium-mass stars use up their fuel, their outer layers expand. At this stage they are called red giants. Eventually, the outer parts grow bigger and drift off into space. The blue-white hot core of the star that is left behind is a white dwarf. Eventually, a white dwarf loses its energy and becomes a black dwarf. A dying giant or supergiant star can suddenly explode. The explosion is called a supernova. After the star explodes, some of the material left behind forms a neutron star. A neutron star is smaller and denser than a white dwarf. If the star emits pulses of radio waves, it is called a pulsar, which is short for pulsating radio sources, instead of a neutron star. The most massive stars become black holes when they die. After a large-mass star explodes, a large amount of mass may remain. The gravity of the mass is so strong that gas is pulled inward, pulling more gas into a smaller and smaller space. Eventually, the gravity becomes so strong that nothing can escape, not even light! Astronomers have discovered objects that are very bright but are also very far away. These distant bring objects look almost like stars and were given the name quasi-stellar objects, or quasars. Quasars are galaxies with giant black holes at their centers. More recently, astronomers have determined that every galaxy probably has a black hole at its center. 1. red giant or supergiant 2. where fusion begins 3. part of a nebula 4. the stage our Sun is in 5. white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole 6. How long a star lives and what it becomes at the end of its life depends on 7. pulsar 8. white dwarf a. exerts such a strong gravitational pull that no radiation can escape b. a huge cloud of gas and dust in space 9. nebula c. what an average-sized star becomes at the end of its life 10. protostar d. the earliest stage of a star’s life 11. supernova e. emits pulses of radio waves 12. neutron star f. shines brightly in the center of a galaxy 13. black hole g. formed from leftover material after a giant star explodes 14. quasar h. an explosion that occurs at the end of a giant star’s life 15. At which stage is a star most stable? Why? 16. Which has the greatest density? How do you know? 18. Neutron stars that emit pulses of radio waves are called 19. Which types of stars are “invisible”? And 20. If you looked at the sky and a supernova occurred, why would you NOT see it?