Technically no, the (visible) color of stars depends on the temperature of the star. The hotter the star, the whiter, the cooler, the redder it looks. An average star would appear pure white (Well blue actually) to a human but temperature technically changes with age as stars evolve. Eventually when a star runs out of hydrogen fuel and burns heavier elements, the outside cools to a deep red (Red giants).
Young stellar remnants would also appear pure white and darker as they age until they've cooled enough to no longer emit visible EM radiation, at which point would appear the deepest black you could imagine.
A newborn star appears blue because it emits hotter temperatures compared to older stars which appear more red.
The color of a star is a clue to its temperature. Hotter stars tend to be blue or white, while cooler stars appear red. This is because the wavelength of light emitted by a star changes with temperature, leading to different colors.
A star's age does not necessarily affect its color unless it has entered the red giant phase.
the color of the star regulus is blue-white
The color of Bernard's the star is red.
because when its temperature increases it changes color because the heat that its getting makes it changeStar color changes as the temperature increases. This is because the hotter it gets the red it is.
A star's color is caused by the type of gases its made up of and the temperature. The temperature changes depeding on the age of the star. Older stars turn red due to the amount of space it has to heat up.
jk yellow
The temperature affects the color of a star.
you push the little dots above the coustume and it changes the color
A newborn star appears blue because it emits hotter temperatures compared to older stars which appear more red.
That Night? i think it was a neighbour, not her sister :)
Opinion when he gets older, it happens to every kid star OR when people realize how dumb he is
t changes depending in what die you put into the star when you made it
Sulu wears a yellow/gold uniform throughout most of Star Trek, including both the older series and the new rebooted Star Trek and Star Trek: Into Darkness.
Spectral analysis informs us the temperature of a star. The hotter a star is, the whiter/bluer and brilliant it is. As a star ages it gets cooler and more yellow, then orange, then red.
The color of a star is a clue to its temperature. Hotter stars tend to be blue or white, while cooler stars appear red. This is because the wavelength of light emitted by a star changes with temperature, leading to different colors.