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12.7: White Dwarf

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    The star can form a White Dwarf, then a planetary nebula. A White Dwarf is the inert stellar core that remains after a star has ended all core nuclear fusion. All nuclear fusion is over, that is, all available hydrogen in the star’s core has been fused into helium and the helium into carbon. This White Dwarf stellar core is incredibly dense; in fact if you were to weigh a White Dwarf, it would weigh about 5 tons per teaspoon. It is extremely dense due to the collapse of the star’s core; gravity has created an incredible density.
    Optical Image (left) and a portion of the Hubble Space Telescope observation (right) of the globular cluster M4.  The white dwarfs are circled in the HST image.
    Public Domain | Image courtesy of NASA.

    This page titled 12.7: White Dwarf is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lumen Learning via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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