yes
Size, color and temperature.
you classify stars by color, temperature, size, composition, and brightness.
Scientists use color, size, brightness, and temperature to classify stars.
Stars are classified by four different characteristics. Apparent magnitude (brightness) and absolute magnitude (how bright it would appear at 10 parsecs from the earth). Luminosity, another measure of brightness, compares the star to the sun's brightness. Spectral classifications are measured by the star's temperatures. Finally stars are signed a number by scientists through the Morgan-Keenan System.
The four variables astronomers use to classify stars are temperature, luminosity, size or radius, and mass. By analyzing these properties, astronomers can determine a star's position on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram and classify it into different spectral types and stages of stellar evolution.
The five characteristics used to describe stars are: luminosity (brightness), temperature, size (radius), mass, and composition (chemical elements present).
Stars can be described by their temperature, size (diameter), brightness (luminosity), color, composition, and age. These characteristics help scientists classify and study stars in the universe.
In Astronomy stars can be classified by theircolor (temperature)composition (as found by their spectrum)agelocation in a galaxymassproximity to other stars
The three characteristic are temperature, size, and brightness.
I don't know if this is THE four ways, but here are four possible ways:Temperature/Color (amounts to the same thing)SizePopulation ("metallicity" is essentially a different description of pretty much the same thing)Mass
by temperature, size, brightness, distance and color
Yes. All ~10 billion trillion stars all come in size, color, and temperature.