Skip to content

death of a star

death of a star published on 1 Comment on death of a star

obviously this is a much more complex and interesting subject than i could possibly squeeze into a four panel comic, so i highly recommend you go watch the episode of ‘crash course astronomy’ on youtube about high mass stars.

also in case you thought i made a mistake with the timeline, no, a smaller star actually lasts much much longer than a larger star, as it’s much cooler and thus burns its fuel slower. while the largest stars we know of (hypergiants) last only millions of years, the smallest stars (red dwarfs) can last for trillions of years. seriously. trillions with a t.

i’ll probably do a comic about this some day, so i should shut up now before i spoil it.

Transcripts

sedna: our sun will spend most of its life burning hydrogen into helium, then carbon, before it fizzles out and dies, shrinking into a white dwarf.

sedna: but a star 8+ times the sun’s mass has enough pressure to keep on fusing elements. …until it gets to iron.

with no more furl to burn for energy, the star collapses under the weight of its own gravity and goes kablooey. leaving behind a small neutron star or black hole.

sedna: …and any alien species within 30 light-years are all burned to a crisp before they even know what hit them!
sfx: glug glug

Webcomic Transcript Authorsthomas

1 Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *