A black dwarf star is so old, it's even older than the Universe itself and doesn't technically exist...yet

A guide to the hypothetical star known as a black dwarf.

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Published: April 29, 2024 at 8:18 am

In a nutshell, a black dwarf is a star that’s very, very old.

That sounds nice and simple, doesn’t it?

But nothing’s ever simple in space, and what complicates the picture somewhat here, is that to become a black dwarf, a star would need to have been around for longer than the Universe has been in existence.

Better to say, then, that a black dwarf is an entirely hypothetical star that’s very, very old, older than the current age of the Universe itself.

Or at least will be, one day.

Planetary nebula NGC 2022. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, R. Wade
Our Sun and stars similar to it will end their lives by forming a cosmic cloud known as a planetary nebula. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, R. Wade

How a black dwarf star forms, in theory

Let’s rewind a little and look at what happens to stars as they age.

The largest stars will swell up into a red supergiant, go bang in a Type II supernova and leave a black hole or neutron star behind when they’re gone.

Smaller stars like our own Sun will swell up into a red giant, then shed their outer layers to form a planetary nebula, leaving behind a white dwarf.

Illustration showing the explosion of a white dwarf during a Type Ia supernova. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Illustration showing the explosion of a white dwarf during a Type Ia supernova. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

White dwarfs are extremely dense – they’re about the size of Earth, but with the mass of the Sun.

They’re also very hot when they first form but cool down gradually over time.

Eventually a white dwarf will cool down so much it no longer emits any light or radiation at all, which is when it becomes a black dwarf star.

Except that, as explained above, that hasn’t actually happened anywhere yet.

Other dwarf stars

Brown dwarf
Artist's impression of a brown dwarf

Just to complicate the picture a little further, white and black dwarfs should not be confused with brown, yellow or red dwarfs.

Brown dwarfs are stars that never quite achieved nucleur fusion.

Larger than a gas giant, smaller than a star, these unloved blobs are scattered throughout the Universe, not doing anything very much.

A ‘yellow dwarf’ is a popular nickname for G-type main sequence stars like our own Sun or Alpha Centari B.

And a red dwarf is the smallest and coolest category of main sequence stars.

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