A blue dwarf is a hypothetical type of star that develops from a red dwarf after it has exhausted much of its hydrogen fuel supply. Since red dwarf stars fuse hydrogen slowly and are fully convective (allowing a larger percentage of their total hydrogen supply to be fused), the current age of the universe is not old enough for any blue dwarfs to have formed yet.
No. A blue dwarf is a theoretical class of star. The known blue stars are not blue dwarfs.
Blue dwarf diameter(sun=1)=4 times the sun's Blue dwarf mass(sun=1)=10 times sun's
Blue dwarf diameter(sun=1)=4 times the sun's Blue dwarf mass(sun=1)=10 times sun's
Red Giants & Blue Giants & White Dwarf star
With scissors
There are no blue dwarfs in existence in the universe yet. Apart from which our Sun can never be a blue dwarf. Finally please note your question is pointless "what if" does not lead anybody towards knowing what it is you are actually asking about.
The "blue" Dwarf Gourami (Colisa lalia) is sexed the same way as all Dwarf gouramis. The male is brightly coloured and the female is much plainer.
Dopey
Dschubba is a binary star system with two stars: a blue star and a white dwarf star. The blue star is the primary star and the white dwarf is the secondary star.
The blue star gains a little more mass.
yes .they can even breed
A newly formed white dwarf will be the hottest of the "dwarfs" - at a temperature of over 150,000 K but this will slowly cool over time. There is a possibility of a hypothetical blue dwarf, when a red dwarf exhausts it's supply of hydrogen. However, because of the slow speed of fusion of a red dwarf, the Universe is not yet old enough to have created a blue dwarf, so no measurements can be made on it's possible temperature.