NO. Stars have difference colors depending on their temperature. The hottest stars are blue and cold stars are red.
No, not all stars are the same color. The color of a star is determined by its temperature, with hotter stars appearing bluer and cooler stars appearing redder. Stars can come in various colors such as blue, white, yellow, orange, and red.
White dwarfs are a group of stars that are the same color and approximately the same temperature. They are the remnants of stars that have exhausted their nuclear fuel and collapsed.
No, bright stars can have different temperatures. The color of a star typically indicates its temperature, with blue stars being hotter than red stars. Brightness is influenced by both temperature and size; a larger, cooler star could appear brighter than a hotter, smaller star.
No. Constellations are just patterns of stars as seen from Earth. In reality they are all different distances from us and have no connection to each other. They are all kinds of different stars in terms of size, type, heat, distance and of course age. Written By: Helpful_hinamoriAmu One day i will tell you ,my real name
No. They come in all shapes and sizes. Colors too! It all depends on how much matter the star takes in during its formation.
no they are not
No, not all stars are the same color. The color of a star is determined by its temperature, with hotter stars appearing bluer and cooler stars appearing redder. Stars can come in various colors such as blue, white, yellow, orange, and red.
White dwarfs are a group of stars that are the same color and approximately the same temperature. They are the remnants of stars that have exhausted their nuclear fuel and collapsed.
Binary stars can be any color that stars can be. There's no need for the two stars in a binary to be the same color.
No. Stars vary in mass, color, size, temperature, and composition of trace elements.
No, not all stars are white in color. Stars can appear in different colors such as red, blue, yellow, and white, depending on their temperature and composition.
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.
Yes. All ~10 billion trillion stars all come in size, color, and temperature.
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.
No
no
Yes, they have roughly the same surface temperature. Internal temperatures may be very different depending on the respective stages of stellar evolution the stars are in.