Research English
Research English
Research English
Stars are not actually shaped like those stars we see in the shops. In a website I searched
“most stars are much like the Sun—giant balls of gas burning billions of miles away. These
spherical stars pump out a steady stream of light that crosses vast stretches of space before it
illuminates the night sky. Down here on the ground, though, stars appear not as unwavering
and blazing spheres of plasma, but as gently twinkling stars.
Why is our perception of stars so distorted? Stars twinkle for an intuitive reason: The
movement of the air in Earth's atmosphere can momentarily dim a star's light”. NASA also
adds that “stars on the horizon seem most twinkly—because there is a lot more atmosphere
between you and a star near the horizon than between you and a star higher in the sky”.
Types of stars
An average star lives around 50 million to 20 billion years, like our Sun. Our Sun is classified as
a Main Sequence Star because it is fueled by the nuclear fusion of hydrogen turning it to
helium (the fuel of a star). Main Sequence Star is just a star in its Main Sequence phase were
its like living like a young adult.
There are a lot of types of stars, there could be some that are brighter, some that are dimmer,
bigger or smaller. There could be stars that release more energy than others. The brightness of
a star depends on its color, the brightest one and the hottest is the blue stars. Blue stars are
very bright and have a temperature that is so hot, 10,000K – 50,000K (9726 °C – 49726 °C) to
be exact. Emitting that much light could also lower the lifespan of a star, the average life span
of a blue star is around 10 million years. There are less of them in the known universe.
The red stars are the cooler ones than the blue stars. They are mostly the ones that shine dimly
and expel little energy. A red star’s temperature is around 3,500K(3226°C) a very low temper-
ature for a star. They are the most abundant kind of stars in the known universe because of
their long lifespan, a lifespan of a red star or dwarf is 10 trillion years.
There are stars that are called hypergiants, these stars could be a 100 or more times more
massive than our Sun. These hypergiants have a temperature so high that its around
30,000K(29726°C), they emit hundreds of thousands of times more energy than our regular
star the Sun. Releasing that much energy shortens their lifespan, a hypergiant’s lifespans is just
only a few million years. Life is so short.
A neutron stars is a very dense star, denser than a white dwarf. If a star’s core was able
to win against the battle of pressure, it turns into a neutron star. A neutron star is made
by a collapse of a star under its own weight, when it fuses protons and electrons turning
it into neutrons. That’s why neutron stars have neutron in their names. Neutron stars
have powerful magnetic fields so powerful that it accelerates atoms around its magnetic
poles producing some powerful beams of radiation. This radiation can kill you. A
neutron star is also known as a pulsar.
Black holes are unstoppable machines that rip matter off objects and brings it to its
singularity. A blackhole is made when a star’s core loses the battle of pressure, turning
itself into a black hole. Black holes are destructive and are denser than any heavenly
bodies, even if their as small as a coin they are still much denser than the Sun.
Nothing can escape a black hole’s gravity, not even light or electromagnetic waves. If
you wonder what’s in a black hole it just an empty space an endless void of darkness, it
is also packed with a lot of matter in a very small area. These black holes look scary but
are very important for the universe, they recycle cosmological debris (asteroids and oth-
er useless space junk), stabilize the formation of galaxies; our Milky Way is in a middle
of a black hole, they also define the shapes of galaxies, and finally stratify the space
around them.
After the explosions of a supernova and nova, the dust and debris that was left behind after
the explosions eventually blend with the surrounding interstellar gas and dust. Enriching the
interstellar gas and dust with the heavy elements and chemical compounds produced during
the stellar death. These materials will be recycled, providing the building blocks for new
generation of stars and accompanying planetary systems.
Conclusion:
Stars are out of this world objects, they were admired by our ancestors and us their des-
cendants. Stars were part of our culture and were believed to be dead spirits or guardians.
They were also good waypoints for finding a way home.
Stars by science definition are spheres of hot gas shining brightly, our Sun is too a star. They are
born from clouds of dust and gas, being fused together by their gravity attraction. Some of the
dust turning into planets or other stuff.
Main sequence stars are stars that are fueled by nuclear fusion of hydrogen, being fused into
helium for the fuel of a star. There are many types of stars, some being cool and emit less
energy like the red dwarfs, some just being average regular stars like our Sun, and some that
are called hypergiants because of how big they are and how much energy they expel.
All stars have a lifespan, some shorter than others around a few million years, while others live
so long that it takes 10 trillion years for them to die. When stars are close to their death, it
means that they have no hydrogen to fuel themselves anymore and start to collapse under its
weight.
Most stars like our Sun, turn into white dwarf when they die. These white dwarfs are very
dense and a bit bigger than Earth. Most white dwarfs explode into novas. If the star is massive
then it explodes into a supernova, depending on what it will turn into. If the star’s core wins
the battle of pressure it turns into a neutron star, if it loses then it turns into a black hole. The
dust and gas remained after the death of the star is recycled and used to make more new
generations of stars.
This research about stars helps me want to know more about them and how amazing God
created these things. Stars are very important for our universe because they are amazing and
are a part of balancing the universe. We should know more about stars and learn what do they
do for us simple organisms.
Let us be a star for our newer generations and show them the rights ways and see how
amazing our universe is. Even if there are scary things in it, we should stand and not fear to try
our best in everything we do.
Bibliography:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/surprisingly-complicated-reason-why-stars-seem-have-
points-180952587/
https://www.popularmechanics.com/space/deep-space/a27392563/blue-supergiants-explained/
https://study.com/academy/lesson/average-star-definition-life-cycle-quiz.html
https://science.nasa.gov/astrophysics/focus-areas/how-do-stars-form-and-evolve
https://science.nasa.gov/astrophysics/focus-areas/how-do-stars-form-and-evolve