no, stars temperature are diffrent according to their color. for instance, blue white stars are hotter than red stars
not all stars are the same temperature and the temperature matters, it also effects how bright a star is. (i am not 100% sure about this answer but that is all i know)
NO. Stars have difference colors depending on their temperature. The hottest stars are blue and cold stars are red.
The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram shows absolute magnitute or brightness against it's colour (which is an indication of temperature) . This shows the main sequence, which describes the typical life of a star.
About 50% of all stars are binary stars - they all have different temperatures.
You have two main categories of magnitude. Apparent magnitude is how bright a star appears to be when we look at it. Different stars appear to have different levels of brightness. However all of the stars are different distances away. So a very bright star might be so far away that it looks very faint while a star that is not actually as bright as it appears far brighter because it is much nearer to us. Absolute magnitude measures the real brightness of stars, or how bright they would be if they were all the same distance from us.
not all stars are the same temperature and the temperature matters, it also effects how bright a star is. (i am not 100% sure about this answer but that is all i know)
no
no they are not
NO. Stars have difference colors depending on their temperature. The hottest stars are blue and cold stars are red.
Anywhere - all stars are hot and bright in comparison to planets.
No. Stars vary in mass, color, size, temperature, and composition of trace elements.
because the sun takes all its energy so all that is left is the brightness of the stars
The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram shows absolute magnitute or brightness against it's colour (which is an indication of temperature) . This shows the main sequence, which describes the typical life of a star.
Cygnus is a constellation comprising 84 stars which appear in the Bayer Flamsteed lists. They are not all the same and cover a wide range of temperatures.
About 50% of all stars are binary stars - they all have different temperatures.
depends on all the stars.
All stars are hot, though they vary greatly in temperature.