How many things can you see in the night sky A lot!
On a clear night you might see the Moon, some planets, and thousands of
sparkling stars. You can see even more with a telescope. You
might see stars where before you only saw dark space. You might see that many
stars look larger than others. You might see that some stars that look white are
really red or blue. With bigger and bigger telescopes you can see more and more
objects in the sky. And you can see those objects in more and more
details. But scientists believe there are some things in the
sky that we will never see. We won’t see them with the biggest telescope in the
world, on the clearest night of the year. That’s because they’re Invisible.
They’re the mysterious dead stars called black holes. You might
find it hard to imagine that stars die. After all, our Sun is a star. Year after
year we see it up in the sky burning brightly, giving us heat and light. The Sun
certainly doesn’t seem to be getting old or weak. But stars do burn out and die
after billions of years. As a star’s gases burn, they give off
light and heat. But when the gas runs out, the star stops burning and begins to
die. As the star cools, the outer layers of the star pull in
toward the center. The star squashes into a smaller and smaller ball. If the
star was very small, the star ends up as a cold. dark ball called a black dwarf.
If the star was very big, it keeps squashing inward until it’s packed together
tighter than anything in the universe. Imagine if the each were
crushed until it was the size of a tiny marble. That’s how tightly this dead
star, a black hole is packed. What pulls the star in toward its center with such
power. It’s the same force that pulls you down when you jump--the force called
gravity. A black hole is so tightly packed that its gravity sucks in
everything--even light. The light from black hole can never come back to your
eyes. That’s why you see nothing but blackness. So the next
time you stare up at the night sky, remember: there’s more in the sky than meets
the eyes! Scattered in the silent darkness are black holes--the great mystery of
space. What happens AFTER a star dies
A. It becomes invisible.
B. It falls to Earth.
C. It bums up all of its gases.
D. It becomes brighter and easier to see,