Every star may be different. 100,000 years to even 1billion years.
2006-06-20 02:48:15
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answer #1
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answered by WDubsW 5
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The star that lives the longest is: The Sun.
Believe it or not, but most people don't realize that the Sun is actually a star.
Have a lovely rest of the day.
2006-06-14 11:29:37
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answer #2
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answered by Goblin g 6
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I've seen estimates that some red dwarfs could continue shining for hundreds of billions of years.
That makes me wander if some red dwarfs, born soon after the Big Bang, have planets orbiting them harboring life which has evolved for 12-13 billion years...roughly four times longer than life's history here.
2006-06-14 12:03:34
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answer #3
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answered by Ethan 3
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it hasn't so much to do with size, but with how fast a star is using what it has. as a rule, the bigger the star, the faster it is using up it's fuel, and the sooner it will die, but that is only a very general statement.
2006-06-14 11:33:18
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answer #4
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answered by drkslvr8 3
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Stars have life cycles just as the human body dose. The star ages, expands and then blows up in a super nova. No the human doesn't blow up. But it dose decay.
2006-06-14 11:30:45
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answer #5
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answered by Dave 2
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As a rule, smaller stars live longer because they burn slower. Large stars get so hot that they burn their energy sources faster.
2006-06-14 12:14:51
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answer #6
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answered by habaceeba 3
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small stars live more that big stars
2006-06-15 04:32:21
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answer #7
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answered by ♀guardian of angels♀ 3
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usually dwarfs, because as big it is as fast it burns its fuel reserve to keep itself of imploding from the huge mass
2006-06-14 16:03:08
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answer #8
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answered by Zeratul 3
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white dwarf or red dwarf
2006-06-14 15:16:38
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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red dawrfs
2006-06-14 11:27:44
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answer #10
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answered by mi_gl_an 4
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