Class M — M-type (Red)

M-type stars, commonly called red dwarfs, are the coolest and most common main-sequence stars, with surface temperatures of 2,400 to 3,700 K. They make up about 76% of all main-sequence stars, yet none are visible to the naked eye from Earth due to their low luminosity. Proxima Centauri (M5.5Ve), the closest star to the Sun, is an M-type star. Red dwarfs have extremely long lifetimes — trillions of years — far exceeding the current age of the universe. Many host exoplanets, including Proxima Centauri b and the TRAPPIST-1 system.

M-type stars are the coolest, smallest, and by far the most abundant stars in the universe. With surface temperatures below 3,700 K and masses from 0.08 to 0.45 solar masses, red dwarfs constitute approximately 76% of all main-sequence stars — yet not a single one is visible to the naked eye from Earth, despite Proxima Centauri (M5.5Ve) being the nearest star beyond the Sun at just 4.24 light-years. Their extreme longevity (trillions of years) means no M dwarf has ever died of old age in the history of the universe.

Characteristics

M-type spectra are dominated by titanium oxide (TiO) molecular absorption bands, which create their characteristic deep red color. M dwarfs are fully convective below about 0.35 solar masses — meaning they mix their entire hydrogen supply, greatly extending their lifetimes. However, this convection drives powerful magnetic fields that produce frequent, intense flares — some M dwarfs can brighten by factors of 100 in minutes. Their habitable zones lie very close to the star, meaning potentially habitable planets are likely tidally locked. The M class also includes red giants and supergiants — evolved massive stars like Betelgeuse (M1-M2Ia-Iab).

Notable Examples

Proxima Centauri (M5.5Ve) hosts Proxima b, an Earth-mass planet in the habitable zone of our nearest stellar neighbor. TRAPPIST-1 (M8V) has seven Earth-sized planets, three in the habitable zone — the most Earth-like system known. Barnard's Star (M4Ve) is the fastest-moving star in Earth's sky and a target of exoplanet searches since the 1960s. Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis, M1-M2Ia-Iab) is an M-type red supergiant whose Great Dimming event in 2019-2020 captivated global attention — it will eventually explode as a supernova visible in daylight.

HIP 44530HIP 44531HIP 41554HIP 41689HIP 44666HIP 44675HIP 44791HIP 44795HIP 41978HIP 44955HIP 42089HIP 42220HIP 4223HIP 42394HIP 42411HIP 45469HIP 42601HIP 42708HIP 42735HIP 42743HIP 42744HIP 42748HIP 42921HIP 45824HIP 45924HIP 45935HIP 4304HIP 43296HIP 4621HIP 46292HIP 46488HIP 43956HIP 47102HIP 47130HIP 47131HIP 47168HIP 47201HIP 60213HIP 57613HIP 6030HIP 60303HIP 57688HIP 5770HIP 5772HIP 57731HIP 57830HIP 57838HIP 60559

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a class M star?
Class M (M-type (Red)) stars are red stars. M-type stars, commonly called red dwarfs, are the coolest and most common main-sequence stars, with surface temperatures of 2,400 to 3,700 K. They make up about 76% of all main-sequence stars, yet non
How hot are class M stars?
Class M stars have surface temperatures between 2,400 K and 3,700 K.
What color are class M stars?
Class M stars appear red.
How many class M stars are in the StarFYI database?
StarFYI currently catalogs 5,834 class M stars.
How luminous are class M stars?
Very dim, less than 0.08 solar luminosities