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==Orange giants== |
==Orange giants== |
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* [[11 Lacerti]] |
* [[11 Lacerti]] |
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+ | * [[Ain]] |
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* [[Beta Columbae]] |
* [[Beta Columbae]] |
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+ | * [[Beta Ursae Minor]] |
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+ | * [[Botein]] |
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+ | * [[Eltanin]] |
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+ | * [[FGC-38919]] |
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+ | * [[Garadius]] |
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+ | * [[Hamal]] |
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* [[Kaus Borealis]] |
* [[Kaus Borealis]] |
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+ | * [[Minkar]] |
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+ | * [[Pollux]] |
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+ | * [[Tyberius]] |
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+ | * [[Sigma Pavonis]] |
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+ | * [[Iota Eridani]] |
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+ | * [[Sigma Librae]] |
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+ | |||
+ | ===Orange subgiants=== |
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+ | * [[83 Leonis A]] |
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==Appendices== |
==Appendices== |
Latest revision as of 16:48, 8 March 2020
An orange giant is a type of giant star with a distinction as a class K star, which is the origin of its descriptive "orange star" notation.
This article is a stub relating to a star or star system. You can help our database by expanding on it. |
Orange giants
- 11 Lacerti
- Ain
- Beta Columbae
- Beta Ursae Minor
- Botein
- Eltanin
- FGC-38919
- Garadius
- Hamal
- Kaus Borealis
- Minkar
- Pollux
- Tyberius
- Sigma Pavonis
- Iota Eridani
- Sigma Librae
Orange subgiants
Appendices
Connections
Stellar classification | |
---|---|
By class and type | class O blue-violet star • class B blue star • class A blue-white star • class F white star (white dwarf) • class G yellow star (yellow dwarf • yellow giant) • class K orange star (orange giant) • class M red star (red dwarf • red giant • red supergiant) • boson star • brown dwarf • green star • N-type star • R-type star • S-type star • D-type star |
By size or makeup | black hole/black star • carbon star • dwarf star (brown dwarf • red dwarf • white dwarf • yellow dwarf) • giant star (blue giant • red giant • orange giant • yellow giant) • Lazarus star • microstar • neutron star (collapsar • magnetar • pulsar) • protostar • supergiant star • variable star • white hole • Wolf-Rayet star |
External link
- Orange giant article at Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.