Asked by HELP ME PLEASE
(PLEASE CORRECT IF WRONG)
A white dwarf star has a surface temperature of about _______ degrees Celsius.
A. 3,000
B. 5,000 to 10,000***
C. 20,000 to 50,000
A bright star will have a negative number for its absolute magnitude (brightness)
A. true***
B. false
A white dwarf star has a surface temperature of about _______ degrees Celsius.
A. 3,000
B. 5,000 to 10,000***
C. 20,000 to 50,000
A bright star will have a negative number for its absolute magnitude (brightness)
A. true***
B. false
Answers
Answered by
PsyDAG
From Google:
180,000 degrees Fahrenheit
Within this nebula, the hot core of the star remains—crushed to high density by gravity—as a white dwarf with temperatures over 180,000 degrees Fahrenheit (100,000 degrees Celsius). Eventually—over tens or even hundreds of billions of years—a white dwarf cools until it becomes a black dwarf, which emits no energy.
Brightness of stars is assigned a number starting with the brightest star starting at about -1 magnitude. Dimmer stars are zero or positive numbers. The larger the number means the dimmer the star is. For example, a star -1 magnitude is brighter than a star 0 magnitude.
180,000 degrees Fahrenheit
Within this nebula, the hot core of the star remains—crushed to high density by gravity—as a white dwarf with temperatures over 180,000 degrees Fahrenheit (100,000 degrees Celsius). Eventually—over tens or even hundreds of billions of years—a white dwarf cools until it becomes a black dwarf, which emits no energy.
Brightness of stars is assigned a number starting with the brightest star starting at about -1 magnitude. Dimmer stars are zero or positive numbers. The larger the number means the dimmer the star is. For example, a star -1 magnitude is brighter than a star 0 magnitude.
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