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Stars are generally classified by their spectral types, which correspond to their surface temperatures. The order from coolest to hottest is: M (red dwarfs), K (orange stars), G (yellow stars like our Sun), F (white stars), A (blue-white stars), B (blue stars), and O (the hottest, blue stars). Therefore, a list showing increasing surface temperature would start with M stars and end with O stars.
O. This is the class of the blue/white giants.
To list stars in order of increasing surface temperatures, you would typically arrange them as follows: M-type (red dwarfs), K-type (orange stars), G-type (yellow stars, like the Sun), F-type (white stars), A-type (blue-white stars), and finally, B-type (blue stars). This sequence reflects the spectral classification of stars based on their temperatures, with M-type stars being the coolest and B-type stars being the hottest.
yes they are, in fact, white stars a hotter than blue or red star, and blue stars are varie in sizes, red stars are usually mid size or red giants or super giants. the bigger they are does not mean they are hotter!
Type-O are the hottest but there are very few. Then type-B, there are more of them but still not a lot. Then you have type-A, which are very common, then F, then G like the Sun, then K and then the coolest common ones, type M which are the red stars like Betelgeuse.
The hottest stars are blue in color and have surface temperatures exceeding 30,000 K. Following the sequence: O, B, A, F, G, K, M (from hottest to coolest), O-type stars are the hottest, with temperatures reaching over 30,000 K, while M-type stars are the coolest with temperatures around 2,400 K.
If you mean stars then 3-5 but the ESRP thing is T-M
yes. there is a blue flavored m and m
Yes, b/c basically each star is like our sun just off far away. They have different colors depending on how big and old they are.Answer:Stars generally are pu tinto several colur classes . The basic difference is the temperature of the gases that compose them (blue is the hottest- red the coolest). The entire range is indicated with the letters O, B, A, F, G, K, and M (often memorized by astrophysicists as "Oh, be a fine girl, kiss me"). The colors associated with the letters are:O stars are "blue"B "blue-white"A stars "white"F stars "yellow-white"G stars "yellow",K stars "orange"M stars "red
M stars contan metal oxides molecules.
Main Sequence blue giants such as Rigel are located on the left-hand side of the H-R diagram. The order is O B A F G K M, and these are spectral classes based on color and temperature. The hottest stars burn blue/white because blue light has the shortest wavelengths and the highest temperatures. Moderate stars like our sun, a type G star, are found in the center of the Main Sequence, and red dwarf stars are found on the right-hand end, in the K and M classes.
According to the official M&M website, his name is Blue.