No. Many stars have a distinctly reddish hue, and a few are a little bit blue.
No, not all stars are white in color. Stars can appear in different colors such as red, blue, yellow, and white, depending on their temperature and composition.
Actually, not all of them are white, but the vast majority of them are.
No. Stars do not start as whit dwarfs. A white dwarf is the remnant of dead star.
The stars that are red are the coolest of all stars temperature wise. The hottest stars are blue, and medium cool stars are white or yellow.
It is the smallest and most dormant of all stars.
They are white.
Stars emit light in all colours (some more than others) but these combine and appear white to the human eye.
Since white dwarf, like all stars, are made up of plasma (ionized gas), they have no craters on their surfaces.
The stars in the Leo constellation range from white, blue, and yellow to orange and red. The color of a star depends on its temperature, with hotter stars appearing blue or white and cooler stars appearing red or orange.
All white dwarfs do not have about the same mass. White dwarfs vary in mass because the stars they form from are not all the same mass.
Stars can range from blue to red depending on temperature and mass, with yellow stars in the middle and white stars on the back end of the spectrum.
It has been estimated that as many as 85% of all stars in our galaxy are "white dwarf" stars. Up to 97% of all stars will likely end up as white dwarfs.Correction: About 90% of the stars in space are actually Main Sequence stars.