No, it is quite hot.
The temperatures of stars from hottest to coldest are blue stars, white stars, yellow stars (like our sun), orange stars, and red stars. Blue stars can have surface temperatures exceeding 30,000K, while red stars typically have surface temperatures around 3,000K.
The hottest are specified as type O stars and have temperatures > 30,000 that of our Sun (E.g. Zeta Orionis) The coldest are specified as type M starts and have temperature < 0.08 that of our Sun (E.g. Betelgeuse) See link for more information
Yes, stars can be as hot as the sun and even hotter. The temperature of stars varies depending on their size, age, and stage of evolution. The sun is a relatively small, average-temperature star compared to others in the universe.
White, blue, red, orange, from hottest to coldest
Stars arent cold. They are only cold if they are no longer a star. :x the color of our sun because it is in it,s beginning stages.
No. The sun is one star.
Yes. The sun is one of many stars, and there are even larger stars than the sun. Our sun is just an average star.
The hottest stars are blue and the coldest stars are red because blue is the color made by hotter burning things and red is the colest burning color.
The hottest stars are blue and the coldest stars are red because blue is the color made by hotter burning things and red is the colest burning color.
They're the coldest part of the sun.
No. The sun is just one star.
HOT ! ;)