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Interésting question for yøu...
How Neutron stars formed???
Are they similar to Black holes...???
#content needed✌
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When two black holes collide, thenthey form a larger black hole, whereas, when two neutron stars collide, thenthey form a Black hole. ... If a star similar to that of the sun's mass dies, it will form a white dwarf. When a dyingstar has a mass which is 1.4 to 3 times that of the sun, it will form a neutron star.
jameel24:
is your answer right
Answered by
2
Hey bro❤️
Here's your answer
Neutron stars are city-size stellar objects with a mass about 1.4 times that of the sun. Born from the explosive death of another, larger stars, these tiny objects pack quite a punch
When Stars four to eight times as massive as the sun explode in a violent supernova, their outer layers can blow off in an often-spectacular display, leaving behind a small, dense core that continues to collapse. Gravity presses the material in on itself so tightly that protons and electrons combine to make neutrons, yielding the name "neutron star."
In certain respects these stars can instead be described very simply and that they show similarities with black holes.We know the spectacular explosions of supernovae, that when heavy enough, form black holes. The explosive emission of both electromagnetic radiation and massive amounts of matter is clearly observable and studied quite thoroughly. If the star was massive enough, the remnant will be a black hole. If it wasn't massive enough, it will be a neutron star.
Now there's another mode of creation of black holes: the neutron star captures enough matter, or two neutron stars collide, and their combined mass creates enough gravity force to cause another collapse - into a black hole.
Hope this helps❤️
#BeBrainly❤️
Here's your answer
Neutron stars are city-size stellar objects with a mass about 1.4 times that of the sun. Born from the explosive death of another, larger stars, these tiny objects pack quite a punch
When Stars four to eight times as massive as the sun explode in a violent supernova, their outer layers can blow off in an often-spectacular display, leaving behind a small, dense core that continues to collapse. Gravity presses the material in on itself so tightly that protons and electrons combine to make neutrons, yielding the name "neutron star."
In certain respects these stars can instead be described very simply and that they show similarities with black holes.We know the spectacular explosions of supernovae, that when heavy enough, form black holes. The explosive emission of both electromagnetic radiation and massive amounts of matter is clearly observable and studied quite thoroughly. If the star was massive enough, the remnant will be a black hole. If it wasn't massive enough, it will be a neutron star.
Now there's another mode of creation of black holes: the neutron star captures enough matter, or two neutron stars collide, and their combined mass creates enough gravity force to cause another collapse - into a black hole.
Hope this helps❤️
#BeBrainly❤️
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