
Originally Posted by
RickJ
Individual stars we see in the image are all in our galaxy and thus within about 50,000 light-years. Main sequence stars like most in the image have lifespans of millions to over one hundred billion years. Every red main sequence (normal) star ever born is still in existence everywhere in the universe as their life span is far greater than the age of the universe. Stars like our sun live some 10 billion years so again, most of them born in the 13.7 billion years of our universe are also still normal stars. Those older than this have turned into white dwarf stars. But those take many billions of years to cool so even they are still rather bright, but small (earth sized) white hot stars. Super massive blue stars (none in the image I'm aware of) do live only a few million years before blowing themselves up. But again, this takes millions of years. No star in the image you see has changed in any significant way nor will it change in any significant way for many centuries to come. Several centuries from now the position of the stars will be seen to have changed as all are in orbit about our galaxy, same as we are. This motion however is very slow unless the star is a very nearby star (again, none in the image are that I'm aware of). So it will take centuries for this motion to be very noticeable without very precise measurement. If Brian Skiff's K0III classification of the redder star in M40 is correct it is a red giant that will in a few million years fade into a white dwarf. But it will still exist, just be a lot fainter and hotter (bluer).