End states of stars
The final stages in the evolution of a star depend on its mass and angular momentum and whether it is a member of a close binary.
White dwarfs
All stars seem to evolve through the red-giant phase to their ultimate state along a straightforward path. In most instances, especially among low-mass stars, the distended outer envelope of the star simply drifts off into space, while the core settles down as a white dwarf. Here the star (really the core) evolves on the horizontal branch of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram to bluer colours and lower luminosities. In other cases, in which the mass of the star is several solar masses or more, the star may explode as a supernova. Even for these more massive stars, however, if the residual mass in the core is less than 1.4 solar masses (the Chandrasekhar limit), the stellar remnant will become a white dwarf. The matter in such a dwarf becomes a degenerate gas, wherein the electrons are all stripped from their parent atoms. Gas in this peculiar state is an almost perfect conductor of heat and does not obey the ordinary gas laws. It can be compressed to very high densities, typical values being in the range of 10 million grams per cubic cm (i.e., about 10 million times the density of water). Such a white dwarf no longer has any source of energy and simply continues to cool down, eventually becoming a black dwarf.
The energy output of a white dwarf is so small that the object can go on shining mainly by radiating away its stored energy until virtually none is left to emit. How long this might take is unknown, but it would seem to be on the order of trillions of years. The final stage of this kind of low-mass star is typically a ball not much larger than Earth but with a density perhaps 50,000 times that of water.
The Sun is destined to perish as a white dwarf. But, before that happens, it will evolve into a red giant, engulfing Mercury and Venus in the process. At the same time, it will blow away Earth’s atmosphere and boil its oceans, making the planet uninhabitable. None of these events will come to pass for several billion years.
The first white dwarf to be recognized was the companion to Sirius. It was originally detected by its gravitational attraction on the larger, brighter star and only later observed visually as a faint object (now called Sirius B), about 10,000 times fainter than Sirius (now called Sirius A) or 500 times fainter than the Sun. Its mass is slightly less than that of the Sun, and its size a little less than that of Earth. Its colour and spectrum correspond roughly to spectral type A, with a surface temperature of about 25,000 K. Hence, the energy emission per unit area from the surface must be much greater than that of the Sun. Because Sirius B is so faint, its surface area and thus its volume must be very small, and its average density is on the order of 100,000 times that of water.
Another well-known white dwarf, designated BD + 16°516, is paired with a much cooler K0 V dwarf in an eclipsing system. The two stars, whose centres are separated by 2,092,000 km (about 1,300,000 miles), revolve around each other with a period of 12.5 hours. The white dwarf produces pronounced excitation and heating effects in the K-type star’s atmosphere. The white dwarf’s mass is about 0.6 that of the Sun, but its diameter is only 16,000 km (10,000 miles); hence, its density is about 650,000 times that of water.