AOL: A Star Trek Costume Heist Led To A Desert Stand-Off Every Sci-Fi Fan Should Know About
Riker, Data, and Geordi in Ten Forward on Star Trek: The Next Generation - Paramount Jonathan Frakes, who played Commander William Riker on "Star Trek: The Next Generation," stole his uniform. As ...
A Star Trek Costume Heist Led To A Desert Stand-Off Every Sci-Fi Fan Should Know About
Artnet: Iconic ‘Star Trek’ Costumes and Props Beam Into London’s Science Museum
In celebration of 60 years of Star Trek, London’s Science Museum has partnered with the long-running franchise to open a free display of archival objects.
A star’s gas provides its fuel, and its mass determines how rapidly it runs through its supply, with lower-mass stars burning longer, dimmer, and cooler than very massive stars.
Its total mass mainly determines its evolution and eventual fate. A star shines for most of its active life due to the thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium in its core. This process releases energy that traverses the star's interior and radiates into outer space.
Star, any massive self-luminous celestial body of gas that shines by radiation derived from its internal energy sources. This article describes the properties and evolution of individual stars.
A star that consumes hydrogen to form helium is called a "main-sequence" star for all the time it is a hydrogen-fusing object. When it uses up all its fuel, the core contracts because the outward radiation pressure is no longer enough to balance the gravitational force.
When a high-mass star runs out of hydrogen, it begins converting carbon into other elements such as oxygen, magnesium, and neon. These new elements become the star’s fuel, which prevents the star from collapsing for longer. This entire process generally lasts a few million years.