Class F — F-type (Yellow-White)

F-type stars are yellow-white stars with surface temperatures of 6,000 to 7,500 K. They make up about 3% of main-sequence stars. Their spectra show weakening hydrogen lines and strengthening calcium and iron lines compared to A-type stars. Notable examples include Canopus (F0II), the second-brightest star, and Procyon (F5IV-V). F-type stars are of great interest in the search for habitable exoplanets because their habitable zones are wider than those of cooler stars. They live for 2-4 billion years.

F-type stars bridge the gap between the hot A-types and the Sun-like G-types, with surface temperatures between 6,000 and 7,500 K. Comprising about 3% of main-sequence stars, they appear yellow-white and are of particular interest to exoplanet researchers because their habitable zones are wider than the Sun's while their lifetimes (2-7 billion years) are potentially long enough for complex life to evolve — though this remains a topic of active debate in astrobiology.

Characteristics

F-type spectra show weakening hydrogen lines and strengthening metal lines, particularly the ionized calcium H and K lines that become increasingly prominent toward later spectral types. F stars mark the transition where convective envelopes first appear, enabling magnetic activity and stellar cycles similar to the Sun's. The late-F stars (F5-F9) show measurable chromospheric activity and starspots. F stars have masses of 1.04-1.4 solar masses and luminosities of 1.5-5 times solar, making them easy targets for radial velocity exoplanet surveys.

Notable Examples

Procyon (Alpha Canis Minoris, F5IV-V) is the eighth-brightest star, a nearby F-type subgiant at 11.5 light-years with a white dwarf companion. Canopus (Alpha Carinae, F0Ib), the second-brightest star in the sky, is actually an F-type supergiant — enormously luminous at 10,700 solar luminosities. Polaris (Alpha Ursae Minoris, F7Ib) is an F-type supergiant and Cepheid variable, famous as the current North Star. The Cepheid period-luminosity relationship, crucial for measuring cosmic distances, was discovered using F and G-type Cepheid variables.

HIP 9452HIP 9453HIP 94379HIP 94383HIP 94387HIP 94392HIP 94393HIP 9482HIP 9483HIP 94401HIP 94491HIP 94501HIP 94506HIP 94509HIP 37795HIP 37796HIP 37802HIP 37805HIP 37806HIP 37813HIP 9526HIP 9527HIP 9503HIP 94963HIP 94965HIP 94966HIP 94992HIP 95082HIP 95087HIP 95088HIP 95089HIP 59629HIP 40878HIP 37879HIP 37882HIP 37884HIP 37888HIP 37922HIP 59667HIP 95389HIP 95449HIP 95455HIP 95457HIP 95463HIP 95469HIP 95470HIP 95549HIP 95550

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a class F star?
Class F (F-type (Yellow-White)) stars are yellow-white stars. F-type stars are yellow-white stars with surface temperatures of 6,000 to 7,500 K. They make up about 3% of main-sequence stars. Their spectra show weakening hydrogen lines and strengthening calcium a
How hot are class F stars?
Class F stars have surface temperatures between 6,000 K and 7,500 K.
What color are class F stars?
Class F stars appear yellow-white.
How many class F stars are in the StarFYI database?
StarFYI currently catalogs 25,601 class F stars.
How luminous are class F stars?
Moderate, 1.5-5 solar luminosities