no the hottest are blue and the coolest are red
Stars vary in color and may be red, orange, yellow, white, or blue. Blue stars are the hottest and among the brightest.
No, blue is not the brightest color of stars. The brightest stars often appear white or yellow in color. The color of a star is determined by its temperature, with the hottest stars emitting blue light.
Well I know this is not what you had in mind but white stars are hotter! If you where to compare, the blue stars would be hottest then the white stars, yellowish white, yellow orange then red. I know many people would have thought diffrently so face it our star (the sun) isn't the hottest.
The sun is a G class star and (from space) its pale yellow.
Blue-white stars are the hottest and brightest stars; Sirius A (and its white dwarf companion Sirius B) is the brightest star in Earth's night sky.
blue and white
Stars vary in color and may be red, orange, yellow, white, or blue. Blue stars are the hottest and among the brightest.
Blue
No, blue is not the brightest color of stars. The brightest stars often appear white or yellow in color. The color of a star is determined by its temperature, with the hottest stars emitting blue light.
The hottest stars are blue or blue-white. Brightness is a different matter, and is not strictly related to color.
Well I know this is not what you had in mind but white stars are hotter! If you where to compare, the blue stars would be hottest then the white stars, yellowish white, yellow orange then red. I know many people would have thought diffrently so face it our star (the sun) isn't the hottest.
the main colors of stars (from hottest to cooler) are blue, white, yellow, orange, red.
The stars that are red are the coolest of all stars temperature wise. The hottest stars are blue, and medium cool stars are white or yellow.
The sun is a G class star and (from space) its pale yellow.
they can range from red for the least hot stars, through orange, yellow and eventually to white and blue for the hottest stars.
No. White dwarfs are fairly dim. The brightest known stars are generally Wolf-Rayet stars.
Blue-white stars are the hottest and brightest stars; Sirius A (and its white dwarf companion Sirius B) is the brightest star in Earth's night sky.