Stars | Causes of Color (2024)

Stars | Causes of Color (1)

210,000 light years away, in the neighboring galaxy known as the Small Magellanic Cloud, stars are being formed at a rapid rate. New blue stars burning at very high temperatures send out fierce radiation, burning away some of the dense material surrounding them. The remaining dense globules form nurseries for more stars.

Stars great and small, and their life cycles

A star’s color is critical in identifying the star, because it tells us the star’s surface temperature in the black body radiation scale. The sun has a surface temperature of 5,500 K, typical for a yellow star. Red stars are cooler than the sun, with surface temperatures of 3,500 K for a bright red star and 2,500 K for a dark red star. The hottest stars are blue, with their surface temperatures falling anywhere between 10,000 K and 50,000 K.

Stars are fuelled by the nuclear fusion reactions at their core. There is a dynamic equilibrium maintained throughout the star’s life between the expanding heat of the reactive core and gravitational forces holding the star together. Fusion produces extremely high energy. Fusion releases some of the energy that binds the particles of the nucleus together, unleashing remarkable power.

Stars begin as a mass of dust and gas dense enough to start collapsing inwards under the pressure of its own gravity. If this protostar is massive enough, it will eventually initiate a nuclear reaction in its hot, dense core. This initiates the main sequence of a star’s life cycle, when hydrogen forms helium at the star’s core through the process of nuclear fusion. Heat from the star’s core radiates outwards through the layers of the star to the photosphere, the visible surface, which emits electromagnetic energy and charged particles as a solar wind.

A star does not stay the same color throughout its lifecycle, since the surface temperature alters depending on the type of fusion reaction fuelling the star at the time. Depending on the initial mass of the star, it will evolve along the lines of one of three main star types: low-mass stars, intermediate-mass stars (like our sun) and high-mass stars.

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A cross-section through the sun, showing the hot core where fusion reactions fuel the radiation that eventually reaches us as sunlight, the radiative and convective zones carrying light and heat out of the core, the photosphere that comprises the sun’s surface, and the corona, the emissions we know as the solar wind.

Intermediate-mass stars are stars similar in mass to our sun. The sun is an intermediate-mass star in its main sequence, which means it is fuelled by hydrogen fusion in its core. Typically, the main sequence for an intermediate-mass star lasts around 10 billion years.

Once all the hydrogen in the core has been converted to helium by nuclear fusion, there is no energy outflow to counter the inward force of gravity and the star rapidly collapses. This in turn heats the core and the region around it to such an extent that hydrogen fusion begins in the outer layers. Even more heat is generated than in the main sequence, and the star expands to become a red giant.

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The Cat`s Eye nebula (NGC 6543) is evidence of successive episodes of a star exploding and shedding its outer layers as its core collapses over time.

When the core reaches a temperature of 100 million K, helium fusion begins. The star continues to use up hydrogen and helium until they are exhausted, which takes around 10 million years. Once all the helium in the core has been used up, the core cools again and the star undergoes a second contraction. Once more, this produces massive heat, and hydrogen fusion is initiated in the next outer layer. The star becomes a giant again, but this time a blue-hot giant. Expansion due to heat overcomes the force of gravity, and the outer layers of the star start to strip away from the star and expand out into space as a nebula.

Once the nebula fades, the core is called a white dwarf, and has a temperature of 100,000 K. This cools slowly, over billions of years, to become a black dwarf too faint to detect. This is the end of the star’s life.

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Stars far larger than our sun, with a higher mass, become increasingly massive and dense as nuclear fusion creates heavier and heavier chemical elements within them, and their gravity increases. Some explode in supernovae, leaving blisteringly colorful nebulae to mark their passing – at the same time providing material for possible future generations of stars. This image shows Cassiopeia A, a supernova remnant shown in enhanced color, blasted material surrounding the dead neutron star at the center. Red detail is sourced from infrared images, yellow from visible light, and green and blue from x-ray data.

High-mass stars have a mass eight or more times that of our sun. They are a thousand to a million times more luminous than the sun, and around ten times bigger in diameter. These stars are highly visible in the sky, even when they are far from the earth. They burn brighter, but their lifetimes are correspondingly much shorter than those of less massive stars.

Low-mass stars have a mass of between a tenth and a half of the sun. If their mass is below this level, they do not have sufficient gravity to sufficiently pull their material inwards to initiate nuclear fusion.

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Images such as this one, from the European Space Agency’s Faint Object Camera (FOC) inside the Hubble Space Telescope, have allowed astronomers to examine the chemical signatures of 43 blue stragglers in the globular cluster 47 Tucanae. This cluster is around 15,000 light years away, and previous images did not provide the resolution to study individual young stars.

Blue stragglers have been identified as anomalously young stars in a globular cluster where the other stars are much older red giants. A globular cluster is a “swarm” of several hundred thousand stars, formed at the same time as the Milky Way galaxy. Most stars in a star cluster like this were formed about 15 billion years ago. They also spin 2 or 3 times faster than stars of a comparable size in the cluster. Pictures of globular clusters tell scientists a lot about these unusually young stars.

There are two theories for the formation of new stars within a globular cluster: they may be formed by collisions between stars, or by siphoning of material from neighboring stars “captured” by gravity as the stars pass close to each other.

By examining the light emitted by blue stragglers, astronomers have established that they have less carbon and oxygen than their neighbors. This supports the theory that the new stars form by sucking in material from their partners as they spin around each other in a binary system.

Nebulae

Nebulae form brilliantly colored spectacles, a phenomenon that becomes increasingly breathtaking as the quality of telescope and spacecraft images improves.

As we have already seen, a nebula can form in the wake of a star, either the supernova of a high-mass star, or the gas shell of an intermediate-mass star ejected when it becomes a white dwarf. The second type is known as a planetary nebula; early astronomers thought that the shells resembled the discs of planets.

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Arab and Chinese astronomers first recorded the Crab nebula in 1054, when its light first reached the earth, in the constellation of Taurus. At its center are two stars, one a pulsar, a neutron star emitting regular pulses of electromagnetic radiation including radio and x-ray wavelengths.

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The beautiful colors of the Orion Nebula (M42, NGC 1976) are an example of cosmic gas clouds radiating light due to excitation by radiation from nearby stars.

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Telescopes such as the Hubble Space Telescope have increased our knowledge of the universe by providing us with a view through the entire electromagnetic spectral range, without the distortion of the earth’s atmosphere.

Invisible stars and dark matter

Many objects in the universe emit electromagnetic radiation that does not fall in the visible spectrum. We can study these objects by measuring the microwaves, x-ray and gamma radiation, and radio waves that they emit.

Quasars produce an intense electromagnetic emission ranging from x-ray to radio wave frequencies. As few other objects emit radio frequency radiation, these stand out particularly well. They alert us to the presence of black holes that form the centers of some galaxies. While a black hole has extremely high gravity and sucks in surrounding material rather than emitting radiation, the quasar surrounding the center is a measurable source of radio wave frequency.

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This black hole located in the Centaurus galaxy illustrates their gravitational pull: the jet of material flowing into the center is 13,000 light years long and is traveling at half the speed of light. Again, this image is a fusion of visible light and x-ray radiation data.

Blazars are similar to quasars, but on an even more dramatic scale. Their emissions are the most violent phenomenon observed in the universe: a compact and highly variable energy-emitting source believed to surround super-massive and dense black holes.

Accretion discs are formed as material is passed from one star to another, for instance between two stars in a binary system, or in the active nucleus of a forming galaxy. Material is sucked towards the more massive partner and whirls around the center of its captor star in a whirlpool pattern. The hot gas accelerates and becomes hotter through friction as it falls towards the bigger star. Because it is accelerating, it emits energy in the form of infrared or x-ray radiation, which we can detect and measure from earth once it reaches us.

In addition to objects that emit radiation outside of the visible light spectrum, there is a huge proportion of matter in space that emits no radiation at all. This dark matter is known to exist because of the gravitational force it exerts, calculated using the distribution of the stars we can see and their movements. Calculations show that galaxies hold up to five times more material than we would expect. One of the ongoing lines of research in cosmology is a better understanding of this dark matter.

Stars | Causes of Color (2024)

FAQs

What causes stars to have colors? ›

A star's color provides a direct measurement of its surface temperature; the hottest stars shine blue-white, while the coolest are dull orange or red. In turn, the temperature indicates how much energy a given area of the star's surface radiates into space every second.

What factor affects the color of a star responses? ›

The temperature of a star affects its color. Hotter stars appear bluish-white, while cooler stars appear reddish. This color variation is due to the relationship between a star's temperature and its emitted light spectrum.

What stars change colors? ›

The star that twinkles in several colours is Sirius. It is the only star that is bright enough that its light gets refracted into a tiny, tiny “rainbow” in a way that we can see.

Which of the following best explains why the stars are different colors? ›

(The star's surface temperature determines its color; the core itself is much hotter.) Millennia ago astronomers noted the colors of stars, and ever since at least the Iron Age, it hasn't been too big a leap to associate those colors with temperatures.

What causes stars? ›

Throughout the universe, stars are born in dense clouds of gas and dust. Gravity pulls the gas and dust into clumps. If the clump is massive enough, a star can form! The growing temperature and pressure causes its core to ignite and nuclear fusion begins.

What is the color of a star mainly due to? ›

The colour of a star is primarily a function of its effective temperature. You should recall that a star approximates the behaviour of a black body radiator. As a black body gets hotter its colour changes.

What factor affects the color of stars? ›

The surface temperature of a star determines the color of light it emits. Blue stars are hotter than yellow stars, which are hotter than red stars.

What does the color of a star depend mainly on? ›

The color of a star depends on its surface temperature. Red stars are coolest, yellow stars intermediate, and blue-white or blue stars are the hottest. The lowest mass, dimmest stars are cool and red, while the highest mass, most luminous stars are hot and blue.

On what factor does the color of stars depend? ›

A star's colour is related to its surface temperature. The shorter the wavelength of light emitted by a star, the hotter it is. Blue or blue-white light with shorter wavelengths is the hottest. Cooler colours have longer wavelengths, such as red or red-brown.

Do stars change color as they age? ›

As stars age, they go out of hydrogen to burn, reducing the energy they emit. Thus, younger stars can look bluer while older ones look redder, and in this way, a star's color can inform us something about that star's age. Class O stars, blue, are the hottest, and class M stars, red color, are the coldest.

What are the 5 color stars? ›

The stars show a multitude of colors, including red, orange, yellow, white, and blue. As we have seen, stars are not all the same color because they do not all have identical temperatures.

Which statement is true about the color of stars? ›

The correct answer is On their temperature. The colour of the stars depends on their temperature.

What is the main cause of the color difference in stars? ›

As a star's temperature increases, as a result of there being more gas in the star – and hence more fuel to burn – it becomes hotter. Its colour changes from orange, through yellow, to white. Hottest stars are blue, with temperatures up to 40,000ºC. Coolest stars are red with surface temperatures of about 3,000ºC.

What is the coolest star color? ›

Key Concepts and Summary. Stars have different colors, which are indicators of temperature. The hottest stars tend to appear blue or blue-white, whereas the coolest stars are red.

How old is our universe? ›

Before 1999, astronomers had estimated that the age of the universe was between 7 and 20 billion years. But with advances in technology and the development of new techniques we now know the age of the universe is 13.7 billion years, with an uncertainty of only 200 million years. How did this come to be?

Why do stars turn red and green? ›

The atmosphere splits or refracts the star's light, just as a prism splits sunlight. So that's where Capella's red and green flashes are coming from – not from the star itself – but from the refraction of its light by our atmosphere.

What does the color of the star indicate? ›

A star's colour is related to its surface temperature. The shorter the wavelength of light emitted by a star, the hotter it is. Blue or blue-white light with shorter wavelengths is the hottest. Cooler colours have longer wavelengths, such as red or red-brown.

Why are stars classified by color? ›

Stars can be classified according to their colour and a star's colour is related to its surface temperature. The colours are on a scale from blue to red where the hottest stars appear blue. The colour changes from blue to white to yellow to orange, as temperature decreases, with the coolest stars appearing red.

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