|
|
|
|
|
by haiguise
2141 days ago
|
|
Yup, the more massive a star the short it lives. The Sun for example will live around 10 billion years, whereas a star 10 times the mass of the Sun will only live for 30 or so million years. Using some hand-wavy arguments you could say that fusion pauses a star's collapse, so the more massive a star is, the more energy generation it needs to stay in equilibrium during this pause. |
|
Therefore, the rate of energy production isn't a consequence of the temperature. The rate of energy production is regulated, so effectively the temperature is a consequence of the required energy production instead.