A black dwarf star is the coldest.
See related question.
Lomuos
The coldest stars are the red dwarves. Anything colder than that would be a "brown dwarf", which is no longer really a star.
It depends on your interpretation of what a star is:The coldest star on the main dequence is a red dwarf.The coldest star off of the main dequence is a red giant.The coldest stellar remant is a black dwarf.However, there stars that cannot fuse hydrogen, but emit light: They are:Brown dwarf < 2,000 oKMethane dwarfs < 1,300 oKSub Brown Dwarfs < 600 oKBlack dwarf 2.3 oK - although none have been observed - See related link.
Assuming that you take it as part of Europe; Greenland has the coldest climate in Europe.
Pluto is not a star. It is a dwarf planet, though planets in our solar system may resemble stars when seen by the naked eye. Pluto is the coldest planetoid in our solar system, though there may be colder planets and dwarf planets in the universe. Pluto is indeed colder than any star.
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.
coldest, bogest, and hornest(some type of outfit).
Yellow stars are the second hottest, Blue stars are the first hottest. Red stars, even though they are they can be the biggest they are the coldest type of star, they are still hot, but not as hot as compared to other stars.
Black - Blue. Black stars have cooled off completely (some are huge hunks of carbon (diamond!). Stars that are progressively warmer are brown, red, orange, yellow, then blue, blue-white are the hottest.
No. Nor is it superlative in any other aspect - for example, the Sun isn't the largest, the smallest, the hottest, the coldest, the newest, or the oldest star.
Red giant is a type of star.
No. Nor is it superlative in any other aspect - for example, the Sun isn't the largest, the smallest, the hottest, the coldest, the newest, or the oldest star.