Stars Vocabulary

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Across
  1. 2. neutron stars that beam out detectable radio pulses.
  2. 7. the part of the star that radiates visible light.
  3. 9. star patterns in the sky that resemble people, animals, or common objects.
  4. 10. giant Without nuclear radiation to resist it, gravity crushes matter down into the star's core, quickly heating the star and causing the star's outer layers to expand enormously and to cool and glow red.
  5. 11. the study of the heavens.
  6. 13. Stars these develop when two protostars form near each other.
  7. 15. dwarf Helium starts fusing together in the core and once it’s gone, the core contracts and becomes hotter, once more expanding the star but making it bluer and brighter than before, blowing away its outermost layers. After the expanding shells of gas fade, the remaining core is left.
  8. 16. Centauri the closest neighbor to our solar system that is part of a multiple system.
  9. 17. the power of a star-- the rate at which it emits energy.
  10. 18. giant, luminous spheres of plasma.
  11. 19. Star after a star explodes in a type II Supernova, if the remaining stellar core was less than three solar masses large, it becomes this star. This star is also made entirely of neutrons.
Down
  1. 1. dwarf Since white dwarves have no fuel left for fusion, they grow cooler and cooler over billions of years to become.
  2. 3. the study of the wavelengths of light that objects emit which made it possible to investigate the compositions and motions of stars from afar.
  3. 4. Dwarfs objects smaller than a tenth of a solar mass do not have enough gravitational pull to ignite nuclear fusion, and might become failed stars.
  4. 5. if one member of a binary pair is a giant star that leaves behind a neutron star or black hole, matter pulled from the stellar companion can get extremely hot and emit X-rays.
  5. 6. measures the amount of “metals” it has -- it is, any element heavier than helium.
  6. 8. A contracting mass of gas which represents an early stage in the formation of a star.
  7. 12. What astronomers use when referring to a star’s brightness as viewed from Earth.
  8. 14. mass the mass of a star is represented in terms of this.
  9. 19. if a binary includes a white dwarf, gas pulled from a companion onto the white dwarf’s surface can fuse violently in a flash.