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Sirius, our brightest star, is orbited by a white dwarf — a dead star's core. Where is the planetary nebula that would have formed when it shed its skin?

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The brightest star in Earth’s night sky, Sirius, is orbited by a white dwarf — a dead star’s core. This binary companion would have lost its planetary nebula nearly 100 million years ago, leaving nothing to see today.

When the sun dies, will it disappear, become a nebula or both? - Quora

Lesson 6

Stars, Page 46 of 128

What is the relationship between brown dwarfs and white dwarf stars? - Quora

Interests, Astronomy

White Dwarf: Dead Star Shining

Is Sirius the sun of the Sun, or is the Sun a moon of Sirius, or are they both swishing around something else? - Quora

Stars, Page 28 of 61

DK - DK - Planisphere and Star Finder-DK Publishing (2019), PDF, Milky Way

Sirius, our brightest star, is orbited by a white dwarf — a dead star's core. Where is the planetary nebula that would have formed when it shed its skin?

What would be the result of a star exactly at the Chandrasekhar limit? Would it make their fate difficult to determine (White Dwarf vs Supernova), and do any such stars exist?