I believe so
No. The sun is a Class G star, otherwise known as Class II or yellow dwarf. It is a medium-sized star.
Our sun is a medium-sized star known as a G-type main-sequence star. It is classified as a yellow dwarf and is about 1.4 million kilometers in diameter.
The medium-sized yellow star in our solar system is the Sun. It is classified as a G-type main-sequence star, which means it falls into the category of yellow stars.
The sun is a yellow dwarf star and as such is considered a medium-sized star. The term is something of a misnomer as the majority of stars are red dwarfs smaller than the sun. The term dwarf is used to distinguish how much smaller event the sun is than giant stars.
Our sun is considered a medium-sized star, known as a yellow dwarf. It is larger than many stars in the universe, but smaller compared to some of the massive giants. The sun's size is just right to support life on Earth through its heat and light.
No. The sun is a Class G star, otherwise known as Class II or yellow dwarf. It is a medium-sized star.
Our sun is a medium-sized star known as a G-type main-sequence star. It is classified as a yellow dwarf and is about 1.4 million kilometers in diameter.
The medium-sized yellow star in our solar system is the Sun. It is classified as a G-type main-sequence star, which means it falls into the category of yellow stars.
The sun is a yellow dwarf star and as such is considered a medium-sized star. The term is something of a misnomer as the majority of stars are red dwarfs smaller than the sun. The term dwarf is used to distinguish how much smaller event the sun is than giant stars.
There are many "Medium" sized stars. For "What is a medium sized star" see related question.
The Sun is a medium sized star.
A medium-sized star, like our Sun.
Perhaps it is called the Betelgeuse * * * * * But only if you consider a red supergiant to be a medium-sized star!
our sun in a medium sized star.
medium-sized star.
Our sun is considered a medium-sized star, known as a yellow dwarf. It is larger than many stars in the universe, but smaller compared to some of the massive giants. The sun's size is just right to support life on Earth through its heat and light.
A yellow star is a "medium" temperature star - a blue star is the hottest.