Yes. Our Sun is also a yellow star and it is about 5,500 degrees Celsius on the outside. It is about 13,700,000 Celsius at the core. Our Sun is considered average compared to a blue star witch is the hottest kind of star in the universe, measuring over 100,000,000 Celsius at the core. One of them is Zeta Orionis.
The sun is a G class star and (from space) its pale yellow.
Some stars appear yellow because either they are yellow or the white color can appear different. The spectral types F and G (our sun), contain yellow stars. This is caused by their temperature.
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.
The hottest stars are blue or blue-white, the coldest stars are red. In between, from colder to hotter are orange and yellow and maybe green. A white dwarf star is even hotter than a blue-white star, but it is dead and no longer undergoing fusion.
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.
yellow stars are about 5000-6000 K by Elijah
their temperature gets lower! hot stars--- blue or white average stars--yellow or orange cooler stars: reddish
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.
they can range from red for the least hot stars, through orange, yellow and eventually to white and blue for the hottest stars.
blue stars are the hottest, although red, orange and yellow stars are pretty hot too.
The color of any start is a direct result of the stars internal temperature. The hottest stars are bluish-white, very hot stars are white, the yellow stars, like out sun, not quite as hot, and finally red stars, which while still very hot, are the coolest of the stellar types. It is analogous to heating a steel bar in a forge, First it will get red hot, then yellow, and so on until it reaches white or bluish-white in heat.
The sun is a G class star and (from space) its pale yellow.
Hot stars are usually white or blue, while cooler stars are either yellow or red.
The seven types of main sequence stars in the universe are O (blue and hot), B (white-blue and hot), A (white and hot), F (yellow-white and medium), G (yellow and medium), K (orange and cool), and M (red and cool).
As stars go, it is the coolest of the types - it is analogous to heating metal in a blast furnace. First it is red hot, them more yellow than red, then white hot, and finally blue-white hot. It is the same with stars.
As stars go, it is the coolest of the types - it is analogous to heating metal in a blast furnace. First it is red hot, them more yellow than red, then white hot, and finally blue-white hot. It is the same with stars.
Our sun is a yellow star. All stars with a G class rating are yellow stars.