skysurfer
21-09-2013, 09:14 PM
In many publications the spectral classes are colored as follows:
O - blue
B - bluish white
A - white
F - yellowish white
G - yellow
K - orange
M - red
With my experience in many cases this is NOT true. Look at Canopus it is white with a bluish tinge, particularly when looking with a telescope or binoculars and then is it visible with many other brighter F stars like Procyon or Polaris.
Same with the 'yellow' G-stars Capella or Alpha Centauri, they look ... white.
So called 'red' stars which are bright (Antares, Betelgeuse) look like a remote halogen bulb or warmwhite LED lamp, which has the same (color) temperature.
Only in daylight, Alpha Centauri and Capella look yellowish in the telescope but that is the contrast to the blue sky.
A 5800K color temp CFL or metal halide lamp (same color temp as G stars) looks white.
What are your ideas ?
O - blue
B - bluish white
A - white
F - yellowish white
G - yellow
K - orange
M - red
With my experience in many cases this is NOT true. Look at Canopus it is white with a bluish tinge, particularly when looking with a telescope or binoculars and then is it visible with many other brighter F stars like Procyon or Polaris.
Same with the 'yellow' G-stars Capella or Alpha Centauri, they look ... white.
So called 'red' stars which are bright (Antares, Betelgeuse) look like a remote halogen bulb or warmwhite LED lamp, which has the same (color) temperature.
Only in daylight, Alpha Centauri and Capella look yellowish in the telescope but that is the contrast to the blue sky.
A 5800K color temp CFL or metal halide lamp (same color temp as G stars) looks white.
What are your ideas ?