No. Red stars are the coolest. Blue stars are the hottest.
Orange is the coolest color of stars
red
the temperature of red star is minimum and maximum for blue stars . our sun is yellow colored therefore red stars are coolest than our sun . Take the example of Wolf 359 (a type of red dwarf star ) located in the constellation Leo . the temperature of photosphere of this star is about 2800 kelvin and the temperature of sun's photosphere is 5778 kelvin ( effected )
Main sequence stars include the hottest stars as well as the coolest ones.
The coolest stars are red in colour
The coolest stars are red.
Orange is the coolest color of stars
red
The coolest - or at least coldest stars are called black dwarfs. See related question.
the brightest star and coolest is betelgeuse
The hottest is blue-white and the coolest is dark red.
They are red.
the temperature of red star is minimum and maximum for blue stars . our sun is yellow colored therefore red stars are coolest than our sun . Take the example of Wolf 359 (a type of red dwarf star ) located in the constellation Leo . the temperature of photosphere of this star is about 2800 kelvin and the temperature of sun's photosphere is 5778 kelvin ( effected )
Main sequence stars include the hottest stars as well as the coolest ones.
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.
The coolest stars are red in colour
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.