Saturday, December 3, 2011

Why stuff Say Carl Sagan who are Star?

I saw a show on my TV last night courtesy of NetFlix instant Downloads still has captivated me by the purpose of the program. It is a "Universe" episode of season 1 (one) who says how the stars are, how they live their lives in various stages of development, and finally how they die. It seems that all stars come to be stars in the same general way, but all the stars are not created equal. Some have to reveal average as our Sun, while other much larger and warmer, and some end to reveal much smaller and cooler than Sun astronomers say stars are formed from very large clouds of gas and dust. Due to the force of gravity, these clouds begin to rotate and Centre grows warmer and warmer on the day of the Star "Turns On".

Stars live most of their lives combustion hydrogen and helium conversion process. This is called the "main sequence" and stars the size of our Sun, it can last billions of years. More stars live on the "main sequence" for a shorter time, normally in millions of years because they parce qu' ils consomment consume their fuel hydrogen at a much greater pace and shine more brilliant. When the star has used all its hydrogen, it begins to transform helium into heavier elements such as carbon and oxygen. Finally, the star runs fuel and begins the process of dying.

More massive stars create heavier elements, and when they die in explosions of supernova, they start these elements in space. The force of the explosion also creates new, heavier, and that all items items will travel to enrich the space between the stars with dense clouds of gas and dust. And so the process starts over again, new stars and planets forming debris once stars.

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