‘Immortal stars’ could feed on dark matter at the heart of the Milky Way

“All good things must come to an end.” That saying applies both in the cosmos and on Earth.

We know that stars, like everything else, must die. When they run out of the fuel needed for nuclear fusion in their cores, stars of all sizes collapse under their own gravity and die, forming a dense cosmic remnant such as a white dwarf, a neutron star, or a black hole. Our own star, the Sun, will suffer this fate in about 5 billion years, first swelling up as a red giant and sweeping away the inner planets, including Earth. After about 1 billion years, this phase too will end, leaving the Sun’s core as a white dwarf glow, surrounded by a cloud of cosmic ash in the form of cooling stellar material.

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