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Young stars are mostly blue. Young stars, at the peak of their temperature, represent the color blue because blue is the hottest color of known stars.
maybe i dont know it can be make you guess.
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That can vary. The color alone is not enough to establish the age of a star.
The oldest stars are metal poor because they formed before there had been many supernova explosions to create and scatter metals into interstellar medium. Those stars formed long ago when the galaxy was young and motions were not organized into a disk, so the stars tended to take up randomly shaped orbits, many of which are quite elongated and eccentric. Consequently, today, the most metal poor stars tend to follow the most eccentric orbits.
The spiral galaxy's.
Yes, there are young stars in the Milky Way Galaxy.
Both - all galaxies contain young and old stars.
Milky Way: Arms extend from a core full of black holes Elliptical Galaxy: Contains mostly older stars with a red color Irregular Galaxy: Contains dust, gas, and young stars Apex :)
Yes: 1) THERE IS A CHOCLATE BAR THAT IS CALLED THAT AND IT IS VERY TASTY 2) WE LIVE IN THE MILKY WAY GALAXY IT IS A BARRED SPIRAL GALAXY AND IS MADE OF MOSTLY OLD STARS BUT ALSO YOUNG STARS
Spiral galaxy- young stars bluish Elliptical-old stars are red
irregular galaxy
Most new, young, stars can be found in the arms of spiral galaxies
It's not "galaxy stars", but galaxies, that have the black holes at their center.All, or most, galaxies have a giant black hole at their center.
Gas and dust were stripped away in collisions that also stripped away many young stars.
Hydrogen (and a little Helium).
Stars form in all parts of our galaxy - not just the "arms". Stars do indeed form in the central bulge. The vast majority of hot, young, blue stars are formed in the arms, but stars also form in the central bulge as well.