Class G — G-type (Yellow)

G-type stars are yellow main-sequence stars with surface temperatures of 5,200 to 6,000 K. The Sun (G2V) is the most famous G-type star, making this class of particular importance for astrobiology. G-type stars comprise about 7.6% of main-sequence stars. Their spectra are dominated by calcium and iron absorption lines. Other notable G-type stars include Alpha Centauri A (G2V) and Tau Ceti (G8.5V). They have lifetimes of roughly 10 billion years.

G-type stars are yellow stars with surface temperatures between 5,200 and 6,000 K. They comprise about 7.6% of main-sequence stars, and their most famous member is our own Sun (G2V). G-type stars are central to the search for habitable exoplanets because they combine long lifetimes (7-15 billion years on the main sequence) with sufficient luminosity to maintain liquid water at moderate orbital distances — making them prime targets for missions like Kepler, TESS, and the upcoming PLATO.

Characteristics

G-type spectra are characterized by prominent ionized calcium (Ca II) H and K lines, neutral metal lines (especially iron), and the G-band — a molecular absorption feature near 430 nm caused by CH molecules that gives the spectral class its name. G stars have deep convective envelopes that drive magnetic dynamos, producing sunspot cycles, chromospheric activity, coronae, and stellar winds. Their masses range from 0.8 to 1.04 solar masses. G-type giants and supergiants exist at higher luminosities as evolved stars that have left the main sequence.

Notable Examples

The Sun (G2V) is the defining member, the only star whose surface features — granulation, sunspots, prominences — can be studied in exquisite detail. Alpha Centauri A (G2V) is a solar twin and the brightest component of our nearest stellar neighbor at 4.37 light-years. Tau Ceti (G8.5V) is one of the nearest Sun-like stars and has been a target of SETI programs since 1960's Project Ozma. Capella (Alpha Aurigae) is a binary of two G-type giants, the sixth-brightest star system in the sky.

HIP 34944HIP 83734HIP 83735HIP 83736HIP 8374HIP 83746HIP 83751HIP 83753HIP 83761HIP 30661HIP 30668HIP 30670HIP 30671HIP 85779HIP 8578HIP 85791HIP 85793HIP 85797HIP 85799HIP 83763HIP 83766HIP 83770HIP 83772HIP 83773HIP 8378HIP 83783HIP 95758HIP 85810HIP 85817HIP 8582HIP 85836HIP 83791HIP 83792HIP 83803HIP 83804HIP 83806HIP 83809HIP 51392HIP 38033HIP 38055HIP 51394HIP 34957HIP 34961HIP 34963HIP 34965HIP 3497HIP 34974HIP 34977

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a class G star?
Class G (G-type (Yellow)) stars are yellow stars. G-type stars are yellow main-sequence stars with surface temperatures of 5,200 to 6,000 K. The Sun (G2V) is the most famous G-type star, making this class of particular importance for astrobiology. G-
How hot are class G stars?
Class G stars have surface temperatures between 5,200 K and 6,000 K.
What color are class G stars?
Class G stars appear yellow.
How many class G stars are in the StarFYI database?
StarFYI currently catalogs 22,793 class G stars.
How luminous are class G stars?
Solar-like, 0.6-1.5 solar luminosities