Bohr's Star Model

You might also like

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4

The colors of stars from hottest to coldest are blue, blue-white, yellow, orange, and red.

The colors of the stars indicate their surface temperatures. There are five star
colors: blue, white, yellow, orange, and red. The hottest stars are blue, with
temperatures around 25,000 K. Red is the color of the coldest stars, which have
surface temperatures of approximately 3,000 K.
The 5 Colors of Stars
While the five star colors are blue, white, yellow, orange, and red, there are in-
between colors. The color classes are O (blue), B (bluish), A (blue-white), F (white),
yellow-white (G), orange (K), and red (M). Remember the order with the mnenomic
“Oh Be a Fine Girl, Kiss Me”.

Annie Jump Cannon devised the Harvard spectral classification, which orders stars
according to their apparent color as viewed from Earth. At the time, astronomers
had not made the connection between star color and surface temperature. The
modern classification system (Morgan-Keenan) uses the same classes, but
approaches colors based on spectra and luminosity.

Star Color Class Approx. Temperature Examples

Blue O 25,000 K Rigel, Spica, Bellatrix 


Star Color Class Approx. Temperature Examples

White F 10,000 K Sirius, Vega

Yellow G 6,000 K Proxima, the Sun

Orange K 4,000 K Aldebaran, Arcturus

Red M 3,000 K Antares, Betelgeuse

The bluest stars are not only hotter than the Sun, but also much larger (12 to 25
solar diameters) and more massive (20 to 100 solar masses). Meanwhile, red stars
are cooler and smaller (only 0.1 to 0.6 solar diameters and 0.08 to 0.5 solar
masses). As stars go through their lives, they consume fuel, decrease in size, and
shift in color and temperature. So, star color indicates its temperature and also its
age.

The Morgan-Keenan star color classification uses the original Harvard spectral classification colors. (image: Rursus, CC 3.0)

Factors That Affect Star Color


The star colors look different once you get outside the Earth’s atmosphere. From
Earth, most stars appear white or bluish because they are too dim for the human
eye to perceive color. So, many people assume photographs taken from Hubble or
other space telescopes are colorized. In reality, stars really are much more vibrant
and colorful than what we see at night.

But, even the space telescopes don’t see a star’s true colors. Stars moving away
from us are red-shifted because of the Doppler effect. Another factor that affects
color is extinction. Extinction occurs when cosmic dust between the star and the 
viewer absorbs and scatters light. This decreases a star’s apparent brightness and
also its color. The dust scatters blue light more than red light, so stars appear
redder than their true color. This effect is interstellar reddening. A star’s chemical
composition or metallicity also affects its color. For example, carbon-rich stars
contain molecules that absorb blue and violet light, turning the stars deep red.

Of course, the most significant factor influencing star color is human vision. Even
though a telescope sees many reddish stars, the human eye is more sensitive to blue
light than red light. So, we see blue stars, but miss most of the red stars. Our eyes
do a poor job of distinguishing color of point light sources, making stars mainly
appear white. Also, human color vision perceives the net effect of a star’s color and
not its spectral peaks. Again, this leads to stars appearing mostly white.
Are There Green Stars?
There are no green stars because star colors come from their black-body spectrum.
In other words, the color depends on temperature, much like a candle flame or
heated bar of metal. The black-body spectrum does not include all of the colors of
the rainbow.

That being said, there are stars which have peak intensity in
the green portion of the spectrum. These stars don’t look
green because they also emit other colors of light. The way
the human eye works, the only way to see green is if it’s the
only color.

But, if you photograph stars or look up at the night sky, you


Albireo A and B
might see a green-looking star. This happens when the (Hewholooks, CC 3.0)
atmosphere distorts light before it reaches our eyes. The
atmosphere is also what makes stars “twinkle”. 
One other way of seeing a green star is when the eye sees separate blue and yellow
stars as one single point of light. For example, Albireo A (yellow) and Albireo B
(blue) appear as a double star. To the naked eye or unmounted binoculars, the pair
appears as a single green star. A telescope resolves the individual stars as yellow
and blue.
What About Violet Stars
The black-body spectrum allows for violet, which occurs at a temperature around
39,700 K. That is quite a bit hotter than a blue star (~25000 K). However, the
Morgan-Keenan (MK) classification system allows for Class O (“blue”) stars that
emit significant ultraviolet radiation. While humans can’t see this light, these
extremely hot stars are essentially violet.

Purple stars are another matter entirely. Purple is the eye’s interpretation of a mix
of red and blue. Stars that emit red and blue light also emit other colors of the
spectrum, so they appear white. The only time you’ll see a purple star is when the
atmosphere shifts the star’s true color.
What Color Is the Sun?
Our Sun is an example of a star that emits peak light in the green region of the
spectrum. But, the Sun appears white as viewed from space because its apparent
color is an average of all emitted wavelengths (which include red and blue). From
Earth, sunlight is yellow because the atmosphere scatters blue light. Near sunrise
and sunset, scattering is more pronounced and the Sun appears orange or even red.
References
Habets, G. M. H. J.; Heinze, J. R. W. (November 1981). “Empirical bolometric
corrections for the main-sequence”. Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement
Series. 46: 193–237.
Hertzprung, Ejnar (1908). “Über die Sterne der Unterabteilung c und ac nach
der Spektralklassifikation von Antonia C. Maury”. Astronomische Nachrichten.
179 (24): 373–380. doi:10.1002/asna.19081792402
Kaler, James B. (1997). Stars and Their Spectra: An Introduction to the
Spectral Sequence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-
521-58570-5.
Weidner, Carsten; Vink, Jorick S. (December 2010). “The masses, and the mass
discrepancy of O-type stars”. Astronomy and Astrophysics. 524. A98.
doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201014491


C t i

You might also like