Stellar Evolution Tracker

Explore star lifecycle from birth to remnant

Trace the life cycle of stars from stellar nurseries to their final fate. Explore how a star's initial mass determines its evolutionary path through the main sequence, giant phases, and ultimate remnant — white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole.

How to Use

  1. 1
    Input the star's initial mass in solar masses

    Enter the star's zero-age main sequence mass relative to the Sun. This single parameter is the primary determinant of evolutionary speed, peak luminosity, and final fate, ranging from long-lived red dwarfs below 0.5 solar masses to massive OB stars exceeding 20 solar masses.

  2. 2
    Select the stellar evolutionary stage to explore

    Choose from main sequence, subgiant, red giant branch, horizontal branch, asymptotic giant branch, or remnant phases. The tool displays approximate durations, surface temperatures, luminosities, and radii for each stage based on stellar evolution models.

  3. 3
    Review the final fate and remnant properties

    The tracker displays whether the star ends as a white dwarf, neutron star, or black hole based on the initial mass and the Chandrasekhar, Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff, and Heger mass thresholds. Estimated remnant masses, radii, and densities are shown for each scenario.

About

Stellar evolution theory describes how stars change over their lifetimes in response to nuclear burning, gravitational contraction, and mass loss. The foundational framework emerged in the mid-20th century through the theoretical work of Hans Bethe, who identified the proton-proton chain and CNO cycle as the energy sources of hydrogen-burning stars, and through the isochrone-fitting techniques that allowed astronomers to determine the ages of star clusters by comparing observed Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams with theoretical evolutionary tracks.

The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, which plots stellar luminosity against surface temperature, provides the primary observational tool for tracking stellar evolution. Stars spend the majority of their lives on the main sequence, a diagonal band across the diagram where hydrogen fusion in the core provides pressure support against gravity. As stars evolve, they trace characteristic paths off the main sequence: subgiant branch, red giant branch, horizontal branch for helium-burning, and asymptotic giant branch before shedding their envelopes. Massive stars follow more complex loops through the supergiant region and may experience episodic mass loss events like luminous blue variable eruptions.

Astroseismology has revolutionized stellar physics by revealing internal structure through oscillation modes detected in photometric light curves. Missions like CoRoT and Kepler measured stellar ages, masses, and radii with precisions unattainable through spectroscopy alone. Combined with astrometry from the Gaia spacecraft, these data constrain models of the chemical evolution of the Milky Way and the formation histories of stellar populations across cosmic time.

FAQ

How does stellar mass determine evolutionary timescale?
A star's main-sequence lifetime is approximately proportional to its mass divided by its luminosity, which scales steeply with mass (L ∝ M³·⁵ to M⁴ for main-sequence stars). A 10 solar mass star is roughly 10,000 times more luminous than the Sun but lives only about 30 million years, compared to the Sun's estimated 10 billion year main-sequence life. The most massive stars (greater than 100 M☉) exhaust their hydrogen in as little as a few million years, while stars below 0.25 solar masses are fully convective and may live for trillions of years, far exceeding the current age of the universe.
What happens to the Sun when it leaves the main sequence?
In approximately 5 billion years, the Sun will exhaust hydrogen in its core. The core will contract and heat while hydrogen burning continues in a shell around it, causing the outer layers to expand enormously. The Sun will become a red giant, swelling to perhaps 100 times its current radius and engulfing Mercury, Venus, and possibly Earth. After a helium flash ignites core helium burning, the Sun will settle on the horizontal branch, then ascend the asymptotic giant branch, pulsate, and shed its outer layers as a planetary nebula, leaving behind a carbon-oxygen white dwarf about the size of Earth.
What is the Chandrasekhar limit?
The Chandrasekhar limit, approximately 1.4 solar masses, is the maximum mass a white dwarf can support against gravitational collapse through electron degeneracy pressure. Subramanyan Chandrasekhar derived this limit in 1930 using relativistic quantum mechanics. Stars whose cores exceed this mass at the end of nuclear burning cannot become stable white dwarfs; they instead collapse further to form neutron stars if the core is below about 3 solar masses, or black holes if the collapse cannot be halted. Type Ia supernovae are thought to occur when a white dwarf accretes mass past the Chandrasekhar limit.
How do Type II supernovae differ from Type Ia?
Type II supernovae result from the core collapse of massive stars (greater than approximately 8 solar masses) that have retained hydrogen-rich envelopes. When the iron core reaches the Chandrasekhar mass after successive fusion stages, electron degeneracy pressure cannot halt the collapse. The core bounces at nuclear density, generating a shockwave that expels the outer stellar layers. Type Ia supernovae, by contrast, occur in binary systems when a white dwarf accretes mass from a companion and undergoes thermonuclear detonation; they show no hydrogen in their spectra and are important cosmological distance standards.
What are the stellar evolutionary phases for very low mass stars?
Stars below approximately 0.08 solar masses never achieve core temperatures sufficient to sustain hydrogen fusion and are classified as brown dwarfs, which cool slowly over billions of years. Stars between 0.08 and 0.5 solar masses are fully convective M dwarfs that burn hydrogen extremely slowly, living for tens to trillions of years. Because they are fully mixed, they consume nearly all their hydrogen before leaving the main sequence, then contract directly to white dwarfs without passing through a red giant phase. No such stars have yet reached the end of their main sequence lives in the current 13.8 billion year old universe.