well as you can see the star is a hot burning thing that shines. it shines for billions of years. the stars temperature is to hot.
The temperature of a star is indicated by its color, with blue stars being hotter than red stars. The brightness of a star is indicated by its apparent magnitude, with lower numbers representing brighter stars.
Temperature of stars is indicated by their color, with blue stars being hotter than red stars. Brightness of stars is indicated by their luminosity, which is how much light a star emits.
its color :)
color
Their Color!(:
The brightness is very similar to the temperature, the brightness relies on the temperature
A star's temperature is indicated by its color, with hotter stars appearing blue and cooler stars appearing red. Brightness is measured using the star's apparent magnitude, with higher magnitudes representing dimmer stars and lower magnitudes representing brighter stars.
Brightness tells you the temperature and mostly temperature would tell the brightness of the star that we are talking about.
The temperature of stars is indicated by their color, with cooler stars appearing more red and hotter stars appearing bluer. The brightness of stars is measured in terms of luminosity, which is the total amount of energy emitted per unit of time.
Mainly by its color.
Stars' brightness and temperature are typically represented on a Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) diagram. An average star like the Sun would be located on the "Main Sequence" portion of the graph, where brightness increases as temperature increases.
Hertzsprung and Russell.