A majority of visible stars are in the main sequence but it is likely that there are a lot more brown dwarfs than are recorded. This is because they are stars that almost did not quite make it. They are not very luminous at visible wavelengths and so may be under-represented.
"main sequence" is the tern.
Most of the stars in the universe are found on the main sequence. Stars fall off the main sequence when they begin to die.
Most stars in the universe today are main sequence stars. Sirius A is the brightest star in the nighttime sky. The sun is the most massive main sequence star in the universe today.
main sequence
Main Sequence
"main sequence" is the tern.
Most of the stars in the universe are found on the main sequence. Stars fall off the main sequence when they begin to die.
Main Sequence
main sequence stars
Most stars in the universe today are main sequence stars. Sirius A is the brightest star in the nighttime sky. The sun is the most massive main sequence star in the universe today.
yes
main sequence
Main Sequence
Main Sequence
No, most stars are not giants. The group with more stars is Main Sequence Stars.
Neither, the sun is on the small side of the middle range of main sequence stars.
There are billions of stars that are not on the main sequence.