No. Stars are suns. Some of them are brighter than out own sun. However, they are so incredibly far away that they only appear as points of light.
White dwarfs are very hot but give off little light, as they are small and dense remnants of low- to medium-mass stars. The high temperature comes from residual heat left over from their evolution, but they do not have enough mass to undergo fusion and generate significant light output.
More like a gold with a very very little light green.
twinkle twinkle little stars? twinkle twinkle little stars?
More like a gold with a very very little light green.
it is not very light but it is little bit light
No. Stars of different sizes and composition have different luminosity (light) levels. A very big star will most likely be blue and shines very brightly, while small stars like white dwarf stars emit very white light, but are mostly very dim.
Which of the following light technologies is known for losing very little light during transmission
because the stars are very far away so the astronomers use light years
Stars twinkle because of the abberations in their light path from dust and gas in space, and most especially from the earth's atmosphere. Some nights they twinkle much more than others. On a very clear night, after a very still day, they twinkle relatively little.
very little, they do however produce energy when they light up, not just when they breathe in.
Brown dwarfs are often considered the dullest stars in the sky. They are not massive enough to sustain full nuclear fusion like regular stars, so they emit very little light and are difficult to detect.
Blue