Class K — K-type (Orange)

K-type stars are orange main-sequence stars with surface temperatures of 3,700 to 5,200 K. They are relatively common, making up about 12% of main-sequence stars. K-type stars are increasingly considered prime candidates in the search for habitable exoplanets — they are stable, long-lived (15-30 billion years), and less prone to stellar flares than M dwarfs. Notable examples include Arcturus (K1.5IIIFe-0.5), the brightest star in the northern hemisphere, and Epsilon Eridani (K2V).

K-type stars are orange stars with surface temperatures between 3,700 and 5,200 K, comprising about 12.1% of main-sequence stars. They have emerged as increasingly attractive targets in exoplanet habitability studies: their habitable zones are closer-in than the Sun's (making transiting planets easier to detect), they are less active than M dwarfs (reducing atmospheric stripping of orbiting planets), and their main-sequence lifetimes of 15-30 billion years exceed the current age of the universe — offering exceptionally stable environments.

Characteristics

K-type spectra show strong neutral metal lines (iron, calcium, sodium) and the beginnings of molecular absorption bands (TiO) in the coolest K-types. Their deep convective envelopes drive moderate magnetic activity with well-defined starspot cycles. K dwarfs are less variable than M dwarfs, avoiding the violent flare activity that may sterilize planets around red dwarfs. With masses of 0.45-0.8 solar masses and luminosities of 0.08-0.6 solar, K dwarfs are sometimes called 'Goldilocks stars' — not too hot, not too cool, not too variable for life.

Notable Examples

Arcturus (Alpha Bootis, K1.5III) is the brightest star in the northern celestial hemisphere and a K-type giant 25 times the Sun's diameter, whose orange color is immediately apparent. Aldebaran (Alpha Tauri, K5III), the Eye of the Bull, is another prominent orange giant 44 times solar diameter. Epsilon Eridani (K2V) at 10.5 light-years is one of the nearest stars known to host a confirmed exoplanet and a debris disk. Alpha Centauri B (K1V) is the secondary component of our nearest stellar system.

HIP 113799HIP 11380HIP 110040HIP 110043HIP 110044HIP 110046HIP 110048HIP 110049HIP 11005HIP 110050HIP 110054HIP 110055HIP 110060HIP 110062HIP 110063HIP 110066HIP 113806HIP 113807HIP 113808HIP 11381HIP 113811HIP 113812HIP 113815HIP 113816HIP 113817HIP 113820HIP 113822HIP 113823HIP 110070HIP 110071HIP 110073HIP 110081HIP 46422HIP 110082HIP 110086HIP 110089HIP 11009HIP 113836HIP 113843HIP 113847HIP 11385HIP 113854HIP 113856HIP 11010HIP 110100HIP 110104HIP 110108HIP 110115

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a class K star?
Class K (K-type (Orange)) stars are orange stars. K-type stars are orange main-sequence stars with surface temperatures of 3,700 to 5,200 K. They are relatively common, making up about 12% of main-sequence stars. K-type stars are increasingly conside
How hot are class K stars?
Class K stars have surface temperatures between 3,700 K and 5,200 K.
What color are class K stars?
Class K stars appear orange.
How many class K stars are in the StarFYI database?
StarFYI currently catalogs 32,180 class K stars.
How luminous are class K stars?
Dim, 0.08-0.6 solar luminosities