The color of a star is not an indicator of size. While yellow supergiants exist, most yellow stars, such as our sun, fall into the category of yellow dwarf.
It is a [[wiki/G-type star|G-type]] [[wiki/Supergiant|supergiant]] ([[wiki/Yellow supergiant|yellow supergiant]]) [[wiki/Star|star]] in the [[wiki/Constellation|constellation]] aquarius.
It is currently a yellow supergiant.
Betelgeuse is a supergiant star.
Yes, Betelgeuse is a red supergiant star.
No. The sun is a G-type main sequence star, sometimes called a yellow dwarf.
It is a [[wiki/G-type star|G-type]] [[wiki/Supergiant|supergiant]] ([[wiki/Yellow supergiant|yellow supergiant]]) [[wiki/Star|star]] in the [[wiki/Constellation|constellation]] aquarius.
It is currently a yellow supergiant.
Supergiant refers to size, not color. Supergiants can be of any normal star color, though yellow is not common.
The largest of the three-star system which appears to us as the single star, Polaris, is a yellow supergiant.
Yes, it is a red supergiant star.
An F2 star is a star that is currently emitting yellow white light. Its solar mass is about 1 to 1.4 times the sun, and its radius is about 1.15 to 1.4 solar radii, so it does not fall into supergiant status.
Betelgeuse is a supergiant star.
Yes, Betelgeuse is a red supergiant star.
The easiest supergiant star to see is Betelgeuse, the bright red star at the shoulder of Orion the Hunter.
No. The sun is a G-type main sequence star, sometimes called a yellow dwarf.
The North Star is a three stars system consisting of a white supergiant and two white main sequence stars.
Supergiant star.