White Dwarf Stars.
Yes,Stars are very bright and they are also very hot
That they are distant or small
hot, bright stars
Hot stars are found in the left hand side of the diagram, cool stars the right, bright stars at the top, and lastly the faint stars are located at the bottom.
White dwarf stars are bright due to their compact nature, but they are not hot in terms of surface temperature compared to other types of stars. They are "dead" stars that have exhausted their nuclear fuel and are slowly cooling off over time.
A white dwarf star can be very hot due to residual heat from its earlier evolution, but it may not be very bright because of its small size. This is because the heat energy is spread over a smaller surface area compared to larger, brighter stars.
Stars are not plants they are really hot gases.
There are no stars that are very cold. Even the "coolest" stars are at thousands of degrees hot; if they weren't capable of supporting nuclear fusion, they would not be stars at all - they would be planets. The "coolest" stars glow a deep red, and are not very bright.
They are red giants.
yes, he is very HOT!
Bright and hot stars are typically found in young star clusters, star-forming regions, and spiral arms of galaxies. These stars tend to be massive and have high surface temperatures, emitting intense light across the electromagnetic spectrum. Observing these stars can provide valuable insights into stellar evolution and the dynamics of the galaxy.
This could be a white dwarf. Its essentially a `dead star` as nuclear reactions no longer take place, but it remains very hot for millions of years from residue heat. They are very small though, compared with other stars or the size they used to be. If a hot bright star is very very far from earth then this also will appear dim from earth. It may have a low apparent magnitude (but a high absolute magnitude).