when your butt touches it
Star temperatures are determined through various calculations regarding its relative size, distance, and color. the principle of dopler effect is use full to measure the temperature of stars..
size/mass, temperature, color, and brightness
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.
No. Stars vary in lots of aspects, including:* Diameter * Mass * Color (and the related surface temperature) * Chemical composition * Density (related to mass and diameter) * Brightness
it is classified by thier size because stars are big and hot. the temperature is may up to 100,000,000 hotter than other stars
Size, color and temperature.
yes
by temperature, size, brightness, distance and color
Yes. All ~10 billion trillion stars all come in size, color, and temperature.
Star temperatures are determined through various calculations regarding its relative size, distance, and color. the principle of dopler effect is use full to measure the temperature of stars..
you classify stars by color, temperature, size, composition, and brightness.
size/mass, temperature, color, and brightness
Three characteristics to classify stars are their luminosity, size, and color or surface temperature.
Star temperatures are determined through various calculations regarding its relative size, distance, and color. the principle of dopler effect is use full to measure the temperature of 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 color of a star indicates its temperature. Blue or white stars are the hottest and smallest. Red or orange stars are the coolest and largest. Stars like our sun with a yellow color are medium in both size and temperature. Generally, the smaller a star is the hotter it is.
There are many ways to claasify stars but the simplest and most common ways are by 1. size 2. age 3. temperature and more so, a combination of these.