Class B — B-type (Blue-White)

B-type stars are very hot and luminous blue-white stars with surface temperatures between 10,000 and 30,000 K. They are relatively rare, making up about 0.13% of main-sequence stars. B-type stars are prominent members of young open clusters and OB associations. Many of the brightest stars visible to the naked eye are B-type, including Rigel (B8Ia), Spica (B1V), and Regulus (B8IVn). They live for tens to hundreds of millions of years.

B-type stars are among the most visually striking objects in the night sky, combining high luminosity with a distinctive blue-white color. With surface temperatures between 10,000 and 30,000 K and masses from 2 to 16 solar masses, they are far more common than O-types while still being rare compared to cooler stars — roughly 0.13% of main-sequence stars. Many of the brightest stars visible to the naked eye are B-type, making them disproportionately important in defining constellation patterns.

Characteristics

B-type spectra are characterized by neutral helium (He I) absorption lines, which reach maximum strength at B2. Hydrogen Balmer lines are also prominent. B stars have lifetimes of 10-500 million years — long enough to drift from their birthplace but short enough that they still trace spiral arm structure. Many B stars are rapid rotators, with equatorial velocities exceeding 200 km/s. The Be stars (B-emission) are a fascinating subclass that eject matter into circumstellar disks, producing emission lines that can appear and disappear over years.

Notable Examples

Rigel (Beta Orionis, B8Ia) is the quintessential blue supergiant — the seventh-brightest star in the sky, shining at 120,000 solar luminosities from 860 light-years away. Spica (Alpha Virginis, B1III) is a close binary whose components nearly touch. The Pleiades (Seven Sisters) are dominated by hot B-type stars wrapped in reflection nebulosity. Achernar (Alpha Eridani, B6Vep) is one of the flattest stars known — its rapid rotation distorts it into an oblate shape 56% wider at the equator.

HIP 26836HIP 26845HIP 26852HIP 26856HIP 26868HIP 26870HIP 26872HIP 26875HIP 26876HIP 26889HIP 26902HIP 26908HIP 26919HIP 26925HIP 26928HIP 26939HIP 26943HIP 26944HIP 26952HIP 26961HIP 26964HIP 26971HIP 26979HIP 26982HIP 26992HIP 26993HIP 26998HIP 26999HIP 27007HIP 27012HIP 27016HIP 27017HIP 27023HIP 27029HIP 27039HIP 27040HIP 27060HIP 27071HIP 27088HIP 27093HIP 27102HIP 27103HIP 27110HIP 27115HIP 27146HIP 27160HIP 27171HIP 27179

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a class B star?
Class B (B-type (Blue-White)) stars are blue-white stars. B-type stars are very hot and luminous blue-white stars with surface temperatures between 10,000 and 30,000 K. They are relatively rare, making up about 0.13% of main-sequence stars. B-type stars are
How hot are class B stars?
Class B stars have surface temperatures between 10,000 K and 30,000 K.
What color are class B stars?
Class B stars appear blue-white.
How many class B stars are in the StarFYI database?
StarFYI currently catalogs 10,413 class B stars.
How luminous are class B stars?
Very luminous, 25-30,000 solar luminosities