The H-R diagram compares a star's surface temperature to its absolute brightness.
An H-R diagram compares the brightness, or luminosity, of stars to their surface temperature or spectral type. This diagram helps astronomers classify stars and understand their evolutionary stages based on their position on the diagram.
The H-R diagram compares a star's surface temperature to its absolute brightness.
The H-R diagram compares a stars surface existing temperature to its absolute luminosity. By measuring the sun from the center of diagram, the star is used for reference.
The "supergiant" stars are the brightest stars on the H-R diagram.
The color and tempautre are related to h-r diagram because h-r diagram has the temperature of the sun and the color of the sun. p.s the sun is the only star in the solar system.
H stands for Hurtzsprung and the R stands for Russell
Nowhere, they suck out all light. So they wont be place on an H-R diagram.
The H-R diagram is a graphical tool used to classify stars according to color, temperature, spectral type, luminosity, and evolutionary stage. H-R stands for Hertzsprung-Russell.
The H-R diagram is a graphical tool used to classify stars according to color, temperature, spectral type, luminosity, and evolutionary stage. H-R stands for Hertzsprung-Russell.
Ejnar Hertzsprung and Henry Russell H for Hertzsprung and R for Russell
A Hertzsprung-Russell diagram or H-R diagram.
The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (H-R diagram) shows the relationship between absolute magnitude, luminosity, classification, and effective temperature of stars. The diagram as originally conceived displayed the spectral type (effectively the surface temperature) of stars on the horizontal axis and the absolute magnitude (their intrinsic brightness) on the vertical axis.
A red dwarf is located at the bottom right of the H-R Diagram. The stars located in that region of the diagrams are small, dim, and red.