The color of a star is its . . . color. In other words, a star's color shows us how white-hot it is. Some stars, like our Sun, are colored slightly in the yellow direction of white-hot.
Bigger stars are less yellow and more blue - the bigger, the hotter, the bluer shade of white-hot they are.
Red giants, white dwarfs and black holes are something related, but different.
It is yellow.
Blue.
Shaula is not a single star, but actually a trinary system (three stars locked in orbit with each other). The primary star of this trinary is a blue sub-giant.
There is no stationary star anywhere in the universe.
That would be the Dog Star: Sirius.
The color of the star Indicates its Temperature.
The star Regulus appears to be blue-white in color.
the color of the star regulus is blue-white
The hotter the star, the closer to white the color.
the color of a young star is *bluish white*
Bernard's star is an old red dwarf star and is the fourth closest star to the Sun. It is the color of red.
The color of a star is a good indicator of its temperature.
what type of star is a cursa star
A star's color is related to its surface temperature.
the color of the star will be orange red and yellowish orangish
No. The color is determined by the star's temperature, not location.
The brightest star is Pineapple-loop and the color is purple.