The temperatures of stars are measured by Kelvin. The hottest, colored blue, is around 30,000 Kelvin. In the middle of the scale, colored yellow, is 5,200 -> 6,000 Kelvin. And the coldest, colored blue, at the bottom of the scale is at 0 Kelvin.
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.
it depends on the color of the starthe hottest star is color blueand the coldest star is color red
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.
you cant really tell the temperature of a star but you tell about hot it is by color. blue being the hottest and red being the coldest.
Their color. From coldest-warmest: red, orange, yellow, blue, white.
White, blue, red, orange, from hottest to coldest
blue is the hottest and red is the coldest
Red stars are the coolest of the stars.However, for completeness:A brown dwarf is cooler.A white dwarf can be the hottest and one of the coolest (Depending on age)A black dwarf is the coldest.
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.
No, it is quite hot.
Our sun is white because of its temperature. The intensity of a star's temperature determines its colour. The brightest stars are blue while some of the coldest are red.