Want this question answered?
NO. Stars have difference colors depending on their temperature. The hottest stars are blue and cold stars are red.
when your butt touches it
No. Stars vary greatly in size and brightness.
Generally, yes. For stars on the main sequence, meaning that they fuse hydrogen at their cores, mass, size, color, brightness, and temperature are all closely related. More massive stars are larger, brighter and hotter than less massive ones. The least massive stars are red. As you go to more massive stars color changes to orange, then yellow, then white, and finally to blue for the most massive stars.
no, stars temperature are diffrent according to their color. for instance, blue white stars are hotter than red stars
No. Stars vary in mass, color, size, temperature, and composition of trace elements.
NO. Stars have difference colors depending on their temperature. The hottest stars are blue and cold stars are red.
Yes, Ofcourse stars differ in size. It may be possible that two or more stars have the same size but it is not compulsory for all. As you know sun is also a star. It looks bigger b'coz it is nearer to earth but may be any star exists with same size. but is its age that's differ or what because on the color i got temp. but whats the size bout?
No.
No.
Binary stars can be any color that stars can be. There's no need for the two stars in a binary to be the same color.
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
Size, color and temperature.
no they cant
size, color, distance and shape
yes
by temperature, size, brightness, distance and color