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Life cycle of stars

Describe how stars form and how mass affects their life cycle.

Start here

The key idea

A star's mass determines how it evolves after its main-sequence stage.

Life Cycle Of Stars
nebulamain sequencered giantwhite dwarf

Use the labels to explain the scientific relationship shown.

Revision notes

The bit that matters

Short notes first. Learn the idea, then use the worked example and questions to check it properly.

1

Star formation

A star begins life when a cloud of dust and gas called a nebula is pulled together by gravity.As the material collapses it heats up, forming a protostar.When the core becomes hot and dense enough, hydrogen nuclei fuse together in nuclear fusion to form helium, releasing enormous amounts of energy.At this point the object becomes a main sequence star.

2

The main sequence and stability

During the main sequence stage a star is stable because the inward force of gravity is balanced by the outward pressure from the energy released by fusion.Our Sun is currently a main sequence star and will remain stable for billions of years.The main sequence is the longest and most stable stage in a star's life.The balance lasts until the hydrogen in the core begins to run out.

3

Death of small stars (like the Sun)

When a star similar in size to the Sun runs low on hydrogen, fusion of heavier elements causes it to swell into a red giant.It then becomes unstable and ejects its outer layers as a planetary nebula, leaving a hot, dense core called a white dwarf.The white dwarf gradually cools and fades. This is the fate of stars roughly the size of our Sun.

4

Death of massive stars and element formation

A star much bigger than the Sun swells into a red supergiant, then explodes in a supernova.This explosion can leave behind a very dense neutron star, or if the star is massive enough, a black hole whose gravity is so strong that not even light can escape.Fusion in stars produces elements up to iron; elements heavier than iron are formed in supernova explosions, which also scatter these elements across space to form new stars and planets.

Key terms

Definitions to learn

Nebula

A cloud of dust and gas from which stars form.

Protostar

An early stage of star formation before nuclear fusion begins.

Main sequence star

A stable star in which gravity is balanced by outward fusion pressure.

Red giant / supergiant

A swollen, later stage in a star's life as core hydrogen runs out.

Supernova

The explosion of a massive star, scattering elements heavier than iron.

Worked example

Describe how a star forms from a nebula.

1

Describe gravity.

2

Describe temperature and fusion.

Final answer

Gravity pulls gas and dust together. As the protostar becomes denser and hotter, fusion begins and a main-sequence star forms.

Exam habit

For life-cycle questions, state whether the star is similar to the Sun (low mass) or much more massive — the pathway differs after the main sequence.Sequence the stages: nebula → protostar → main sequence → red giant/supergiant → beyond.

Watch out

Do not confuse a supernova with the formation of every star.

Examiner tips

How to score full marks

  • 1Always state that a main sequence star is stable because gravity balances the outward fusion pressure.
  • 2Know two pathways: Sun-sized stars end as white dwarfs; massive stars end as neutron stars or black holes.
  • 3Elements up to iron form by fusion in stars; heavier elements form in supernovae — a common exam point.
Practice questions

Try these yourself

Start with the core skill, then open the answer only after you have attempted the full question.

1What happens to a Sun-like star after its main-sequence stage?
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Follow the low-mass pathway.
It becomes a red giant, then a white dwarf and eventually a black dwarf.
2What can remain after a massive star explodes as a supernova?
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Name the possible remnants.
A neutron star or black hole.
3Explain why stars remain stable during the main sequence.
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Compare gravity and expansion pressure.
Inward gravitational forces balance outward pressure caused by energy released in fusion.
4Name the process that releases energy in the core of a star and state what it produces from hydrogen.[2 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Name fusion.
  2. 2.State product.
Nuclear fusion (1); it fuses hydrogen nuclei to form helium (1).
5State the two forces that are balanced in a stable main sequence star.[2 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Gravity inward.
  2. 2.Fusion pressure outward.
The inward force of gravity (1) is balanced by the outward pressure from energy released by fusion (1).
6Describe the stages in the life cycle of a star the same size as the Sun, after the main sequence.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Red giant.
  2. 2.Planetary nebula ejected.
  3. 3.White dwarf.
It swells into a red giant (1), then ejects its outer layers as a planetary nebula (1), leaving a white dwarf that cools and fades (1).
7Describe how a star much larger than the Sun ends its life.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Red supergiant.
  2. 2.Supernova.
  3. 3.Neutron star or black hole.
It expands into a red supergiant (1), then explodes as a supernova (1), leaving behind a neutron star or, if massive enough, a black hole (1).
8Explain how the elements found in the Earth and in our bodies were originally produced, referring to fusion in stars and to supernovae.[4 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Fusion makes elements up to iron.
  2. 2.Heavier elements need supernovae.
  3. 3.Supernova scatters elements into space.
  4. 4.New stars/planets form from this material.
Nuclear fusion in stars produces elements up to iron (1). Elements heavier than iron are created in the extreme conditions of a supernova explosion (1). The supernova scatters all these elements across space (1), where they later become part of new stars, planets and ultimately living things such as us (1).
9Explain what is meant by a 'protostar' and describe the physical changes that cause it to become a main sequence star.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Nebula pulled together by gravity.
  2. 2.Material heats as it compresses — protostar.
  3. 3.Temperature and pressure rise in core.
  4. 4.When high enough, hydrogen fusion begins.
  5. 5.Outward fusion pressure balances gravity — main sequence.
A protostar is the early stage of stellar formation in which a cloud of gas and dust is being pulled together by gravity before nuclear fusion has begun (1); as the material collapses, gravitational potential energy is converted to thermal energy, so the core temperature and pressure rise (1); when the core temperature reaches about 15 million degrees C, the pressure is sufficient for hydrogen nuclei to fuse into helium, releasing a large amount of energy; the outward radiation pressure from this fusion eventually balances the inward gravitational force and the protostar becomes a stable main sequence star (1)
10Explain why a star with a mass much greater than the Sun evolves more quickly than a Sun-like star, and state what different end products result from each pathway.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.More massive star has stronger gravity — higher core temperature/pressure.
  2. 2.Faster rate of fusion — burns fuel more quickly.
  3. 3.Shorter main sequence lifetime.
  4. 4.Sun-like: white dwarf; massive: neutron star or black hole.
A more massive star has a much stronger gravitational force compressing the core, producing higher temperatures and pressures; this causes nuclear fusion to occur at a much faster rate, consuming hydrogen in the core far more quickly (1); as a result, massive stars spend much less time on the main sequence — millions of years compared to billions for a Sun-like star (1); a Sun-like star eventually becomes a red giant, ejects a planetary nebula and leaves a white dwarf; a massive star swells into a red supergiant, explodes as a supernova and leaves a neutron star or (for the most massive stars) a black hole (1)
11Describe what a black hole is, explain why not even light can escape from it, and state the observational evidence that black holes exist.[3 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Black hole is remnant of a very massive star after supernova.
  2. 2.Gravity so strong that escape velocity exceeds speed of light.
  3. 3.Even photons cannot escape.
  4. 4.Evidence: effects on nearby stars; gravitational waves; imaging.
A black hole is the extremely dense remnant left after a very massive star collapses following a supernova explosion; the mass is compressed into such a small volume that the gravitational field is extraordinarily strong (1); the escape velocity at the surface (event horizon) exceeds the speed of light, meaning that nothing — including photons of light — has enough energy to escape the gravitational pull (1); black holes cannot be seen directly, but their existence is inferred from the orbits of nearby stars that appear to orbit an invisible, extremely massive object, from X-rays emitted by gas falling into them, from gravitational waves detected when two black holes merge, and from direct imaging of the shadow of a supermassive black hole by the Event Horizon Telescope (1)
12Evaluate the statement: 'The life cycle of a star is essentially determined by its initial mass.' In your answer, compare in detail the life cycles of a low-mass star and a high-mass star, explaining the role of mass at each stage from formation to final remnant. Include reference to nuclear fusion, gravitational force and the elements produced.[6 marks]
Mark scheme
  1. 1.Formation: both from nebula; gravity pulls material together; heavier nebula gives more massive star.
  2. 2.Main sequence: same principle (gravity vs fusion pressure) but massive star hotter/brighter/shorter-lived.
  3. 3.Post-main sequence: low mass → red giant → planetary nebula → white dwarf; high mass → red supergiant → supernova → neutron star/black hole.
  4. 4.Elements: both produce up to iron; supernovae (only massive stars) produce heavier elements.
  5. 5.Conclusion: initial mass is the key determinant.
Both low-mass and high-mass stars form from a nebula when gravity pulls the gas and dust together into a protostar; a larger initial mass means stronger gravity, higher core temperature and pressure (1); during the main sequence both are stabilised by the balance between gravity and fusion pressure, but the more massive star has a much higher fusion rate; it is hotter, more luminous and exhausts its hydrogen fuel in millions rather than billions of years (1); when hydrogen runs out the core contracts and outer layers expand: a low-mass star becomes a red giant, ejects a planetary nebula and leaves a small, dense white dwarf that cools over time; a high-mass star becomes a red supergiant, then explodes as a supernova, producing an intense burst of energy and scattering elements across space; the remnant is a neutron star (for moderate mass) or a black hole (for the most massive) (1); fusion in both types of stars builds elements up to iron; only the extreme conditions of a supernova can produce elements heavier than iron, so these are exclusively products of high-mass stellar evolution (1); the statement is therefore well-supported: initial mass sets the rate of fusion, the main-sequence lifetime, the end stages, the type of remnant, and even which elements are synthesised — making mass the single most important factor in stellar evolution (1) — award max 6
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