The hottest stars are blue or blue-white, the coldest stars are red.
In between, from colder to hotter are orange and yellow and maybe green.
A white dwarf star is even hotter than a blue-white star, but it is dead and no longer undergoing fusion.
The color of a star depends on its surface temperature. But hot stars are blue, and medium-hot stars are white, and cool stars are red.
Red is the least hot.
Yellow stars are the second hottest, Blue stars are the first hottest. Red stars, even though they are they can be the biggest they are the coldest type of star, they are still hot, but not as hot as compared to other stars.
how cold or hot it is
yes
The color of a star depends on its surface temperature. But hot stars are blue, and medium-hot stars are white, and cool stars are red.
Red is the least hot.
All stars are hot. Their temperature can be determined by their color. The "coolest" stars are red in color. As temperature increases stars will go through orange, yellow, white, and finally blue for the hottest stars.
The color of the stars depend on how hot they burn.
Yellow stars are the second hottest, Blue stars are the first hottest. Red stars, even though they are they can be the biggest they are the coldest type of star, they are still hot, but not as hot as compared to other stars.
how cold or hot it is
the color of the stars usually determines how old and how hot the star is it can also determine when the star will go supernova
yes
it is really green but it moves so fast to make it the color it is now...
Stars are not plants they are really hot gases.
it depends on the color of the starthe hottest star is color blueand the coldest star is color red
Stars flicker all sorts of colors, and the color of the star tells how hot it is. For example, blue and white stars are extremely hot, red stars aren't very hot (but not enough for you to walk on), and green stars are in the middle.