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The "Star o Rabbie Burns" was written in 1794 by Scottish poet Robert Tannahill as a tribute to the famous poet Robert Burns who had passed away earlier that year. The poem celebrates Burns's legacy and enduring influence on Scottish literature.
O=c=o
An O star will have a blue to blue-white colour.
a mature star is a stare that is almost o pre teen a mature star is a stare that is almost o pre teen a mature star is a stare that is almost o pre teen
Hydrogen burns because the energy released from the H-O bonds it forms with water is greater than the energy required to break the H-H and O=O bonds in molecular oxygen and hydrogen. 2 H2 + O2 ---> 2 H2O
an o-type blue star has a less length life than a g-type sun like star, this is because a the larger, hotter star, (the o-type blue star) uses its fuel (converting hydrogen into oxygen) quicker, so the correct answer to your question is the o-type blue star.
Yes, the sun is a star.
A star with a spectral class of O is classified as a Blue Star. A red star will have a spectral class of M See related question
The answer to this question is Jean Sterling Mackinlay, daughter of the opera singer (my gg-aunt) Antoinette Sterling-Mackinlay and John Mackinlay.
O
Robert Burns wrote "Tam o' Shanter" in 1790. It is one of his most famous poems and was inspired by local folklore and legends.
An O star will stay on the main sequence for millions of years whereas a M star can stay on the main sequence for billions and billions of years.