Yes. Amsonia hubrichtii is the scientific name of a blue star. Blue stars are part of the Main Sequence stars.
blue stars are the hottest stars.
All galaxies contain hot blue stars...
The hottest stars are the blue stars, the blue hypergiants in particular. One example is "R136a1", which is a blue hypergiant that has estimated surface temperatures of over 40,000 Kelvin (well over 70,000 F). Our Suns effective temperature is around 5,700K for comparison.
The hottest star is called O-type blue stars. They have surface temperatures of around 30,000-60,000 degrees Celsius.
False. Blue giants(or hypergiants) are hotter than Red giant stars. White dwarves are also hotter but they are smaller than blue giants. (As is implied by the name.)
The hottest stars are the blue stars, the blue hypergiants in particular. One example is "R136a1", which is a blue hypergiant that has estimated surface temperatures of over 40,000 Kelvin (well over 70,000 F). Our Suns effective temperature is around 5,700K for comparison.
Red stars are cooler than blue stars
* Blue * White * Yellow * Orange
It means that they are a Cyberguide
No. Red stars are the coolest. Blue stars are the hottest.
Elliptical Galaxy The Elliptical Galaxy has mostly old stars and blue stars are new stars.
No, red dwarfs are called such because of their reddish color. They are the coolest of the main sequence stars. Blue stars are the hottest.