QUESTION IMAGE
Question
number the steps of stellar evolution in the correct order.
- step 1
- step 2
- step 3
- step 4
- step 5
- step 6
cloud collapses under the force of its own gravitational attraction; usually triggered by a supernova.
nebular cloud of gas and dust.
stellar core heats as it grows; nuclear fusion begins and a star is born.
other gas and matter of the nebular cloud begin to rotate around the protostar, forming a flattened, disk.
condensed material begins to combine and form a core center. as it warms, a protostar is formed.
nuclear energy runs out; death; possible supernova.
To solve this, we analyze the stages of stellar evolution:
Step 1: Identify the initial stage
The process starts with a nebular cloud of gas and dust (this is the raw material for star formation). So Step 1: Nebular cloud of gas and dust.
Step 2: Trigger for collapse
Next, the cloud collapses under its own gravity (often triggered by a supernova). So Step 2: Cloud collapses under the force of its own gravitational attraction; usually triggered by a supernova.
Step 3: Forming the protostar’s core
After collapse, condensed material combines to form a core (which warms into a protostar). So Step 3: Condensed material begins to combine and form a core center. As it warms, a protostar is formed.
Step 4: Disk formation
Material around the protostar rotates, forming a disk. So Step 4: Other gas and matter of the nebular cloud begin to rotate around the protostar, forming a flattened, disk.
Step 5: Star birth (nuclear fusion)
The stellar core heats, nuclear fusion starts, and a star is born. So Step 5: Stellar core heats as it grows; nuclear fusion begins and a star is born.
Step 6: Star’s death
Finally, nuclear energy runs out, leading to death (and possible supernova). So Step 6: Nuclear energy runs out; death; possible supernova.
Final Order:
- Step 1: Nebular cloud of gas and dust.
- Step 2: Cloud collapses under the force of its own gravitational attraction; usually triggered by a supernova.
- Step 3: Condensed material begins to combine and form a core center. As it warms, a protostar is formed.
- Step 4: Other gas and matter of the nebular cloud begin to rotate around the protostar, forming a flattened, disk.
- Step 5: Stellar core heats as it grows; nuclear fusion begins and a star is born.
- Step 6: Nuclear energy runs out; death; possible supernova.
(If numbering the checkboxes, the order of the statements from top to bottom would be: Step 2, Step 1, Step 5, Step 4, Step 3, Step 6. So the checkbox numbers (from top to bottom) are 2, 1, 5, 4, 3, 6.)
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
To solve this, we analyze the stages of stellar evolution:
Step 1: Identify the initial stage
The process starts with a nebular cloud of gas and dust (this is the raw material for star formation). So Step 1: Nebular cloud of gas and dust.
Step 2: Trigger for collapse
Next, the cloud collapses under its own gravity (often triggered by a supernova). So Step 2: Cloud collapses under the force of its own gravitational attraction; usually triggered by a supernova.
Step 3: Forming the protostar’s core
After collapse, condensed material combines to form a core (which warms into a protostar). So Step 3: Condensed material begins to combine and form a core center. As it warms, a protostar is formed.
Step 4: Disk formation
Material around the protostar rotates, forming a disk. So Step 4: Other gas and matter of the nebular cloud begin to rotate around the protostar, forming a flattened, disk.
Step 5: Star birth (nuclear fusion)
The stellar core heats, nuclear fusion starts, and a star is born. So Step 5: Stellar core heats as it grows; nuclear fusion begins and a star is born.
Step 6: Star’s death
Finally, nuclear energy runs out, leading to death (and possible supernova). So Step 6: Nuclear energy runs out; death; possible supernova.
Final Order:
- Step 1: Nebular cloud of gas and dust.
- Step 2: Cloud collapses under the force of its own gravitational attraction; usually triggered by a supernova.
- Step 3: Condensed material begins to combine and form a core center. As it warms, a protostar is formed.
- Step 4: Other gas and matter of the nebular cloud begin to rotate around the protostar, forming a flattened, disk.
- Step 5: Stellar core heats as it grows; nuclear fusion begins and a star is born.
- Step 6: Nuclear energy runs out; death; possible supernova.
(If numbering the checkboxes, the order of the statements from top to bottom would be: Step 2, Step 1, Step 5, Step 4, Step 3, Step 6. So the checkbox numbers (from top to bottom) are 2, 1, 5, 4, 3, 6.)