A true color image of the old nova GK Per taken with the WIYN telescope of Kitt Peak National Observatory.
The hot core is initially supported by the degenerate electrons and the hot nuclei contained in the core. The star follows a well-defined track in the Hertzprung-Russell diagram.
White dwarfs are the endpoints of the evolution of low mass stars. They are interesting objects in that they are supported by degenerate electron pressure and thus do not need internal nuclear energy sources. White dwarfs radiate because they are born hot and because they slowly contract releasing gravitational energy as they cool.
White dwarfs cannot be more massive than 1.4 M(sun) (Chandrasekhar Limit, see below) and they have radii on the order of the radius of the Earth, R(wd) ~ 10,000 kilometers. Comment -- this means that white dwarfs are extremely dense; densities on the order of 200,000 grams per cc to 100,000,000 grams per cc. Recall that the density of lead is ~ 11 grams per cc. A sugar cube of white dwarf material would weigh anywhere from 400 pounds to 200 tons at the surface of the Earth!
that is, the larger the mass of the white dwarf, the smaller is its radius!!
For more massive white dwarfs, one expects larger gravities ===> larger pressures ===. larger densities ===> smaller radiii!!
-P/R ~ - M x density / R**2
density ** 5/3 ~ M x density / R
density ** 2/3 ~ M / R ===> M ** 1/3 ~ 1 / R or R ~ 1 / M ** 1/3
Effectively this means that there is an upper limit to the mass of a white dwarf. The limit is ~ 1.4 M(sun) and is referred to as the Chandrasekar Limit