title | layout |
---|---|
Thinking Ahead |
page |
class="introduction"
class="summary" title="Summary"
class="further-exploration" title="For Further Exploration"
class="group-activities" title="Collaborative Group Activities"
class="review-questions" title="Review Questions"
class="thought-questions" title="Thought Questions"
class="figuring-for-yourself" title="Figuring for Yourself"
{: #OSC_Astro_18_00_NGC290 data-title="Variety of Stars."}
How do stars form? How long do they live? And how do they die? Stop and think how hard it is to answer these questions.
Stars live such a long time that nothing much can be gained from staring at one for a human lifetime. To discover how stars evolve from birth to death, it was necessary to measure the characteristics of many stars (to take a celestial census, in effect) and then determine which characteristics help us understand the stars’ life stories. Astronomers tried a variety of hypotheses about stars until they came up with the right approach to understanding their development. But the key was first making a thorough census of the stars around us.