All stars are hot, though they vary greatly in temperature.
hot
All stars are hot. Their temperature can be determined by their color. The "coolest" stars are red in color. As temperature increases stars will go through orange, yellow, white, and finally blue for the hottest stars.
There is no such thing as a cold star, as even the lowest-temperature stars are very hot. That said, cooler stars last longer as they burn their fuel more slowly.
No. All stars are hot. For stars on the main sequence, the largest it is, the hotter it is. When a star leaves the main sequence to become a giant or supergiant it will cool down, but will remain hot enough to glow brightly.
how cold or hot it is
they are every where ALL of the little lites are stars.
Stars make their own light, but they are not cold. Stars are extremely hot. We do not feel their heat because they are incredibly distant.
There are no stars that are very cold. Even the "coolest" stars are at thousands of degrees hot; if they weren't capable of supporting nuclear fusion, they would not be stars at all - they would be planets. The "coolest" stars glow a deep red, and are not very bright.
it is warm in Wyoming.Not cold or hot just both.
All stars are hot. A white star is hotter than average with e temperature of about 7,200 to 9,200 degrees Celsius.
Tea may be had both as a hot beverage or a cold one. Depends a lot on the type of teas. not all tea may be had as cold tea/ice tea
there both cold then they get hot