Under Cold Blue Stars was created in 2002.
Cold Blue Torch was created in 1996.
Cold Blue Excursion was created in 1971.
Cold Blue was created on 2000-10-24.
Blue stars are hot, and red stars are cold. You'd think it would be the other way around, but weirdly enough, it's not.
No. Red stars emit less energy so they are cooler than hotter blue stars.
Blue stars are typically hotter than other colored stars. They have surface temperatures ranging from 10,000 to 40,000 Kelvin, which is significantly higher than many other types of stars.
All stars are hot. Their temperature can be determined by their color. The "coolest" stars are red in color. As temperature increases stars will go through orange, yellow, white, and finally blue for the hottest stars.
The hottest part of a normal flame is actually WHITE. But BLUE flames indicate complete combustion and the ionization of radicals within the fuel, and are therefore the hottest of any "color" in a flame.
Stars come in different colors based on their temperature. Hotter stars appear blue or white while cooler stars can appear red or yellow. The color of a star is an indication of its temperature and stage in its life cycle.
they are every where ALL of the little lites are stars.
no it is hot blue =hot white = warm yellow = medium orange = cool red = cold
The Big Dipper is not a physical object but a pattern of stars in the sky. Stars vary in temperature based on their color, with blue and white stars being hotter and red stars being cooler. The stars that make up the Big Dipper are a mix of different temperatures.