Class O — O-type (Blue)

O-type stars are the hottest and most luminous main-sequence stars. With surface temperatures exceeding 30,000 K, they appear blue-white and emit strongly in the ultraviolet. They are extremely rare, comprising less than 0.00003% of main-sequence stars, but their enormous luminosity makes them visible across vast distances. O-type stars have short lifetimes of only a few million years and end their lives as supernovae, often leaving behind neutron stars or black holes. Examples include the Trapezium stars in Orion.

O-type stars are the hottest, most luminous, and rarest stars in the universe. With surface temperatures exceeding 30,000 K and luminosities up to millions of times that of the Sun, they are cosmic powerhouses that dominate the appearance of young star-forming regions despite comprising less than 0.00003% of main-sequence stars. Their intense ultraviolet radiation ionizes surrounding hydrogen gas, creating the glowing H II regions and emission nebulae that mark spiral arms in galaxies.

Characteristics

O-type stars appear blue-white and have masses ranging from 15 to over 100 solar masses. Their spectra show ionized helium (He II) absorption lines — a defining feature, as helium requires extreme temperatures to become doubly ionized. These stars burn through their hydrogen fuel at prodigious rates: while the Sun will shine for 10 billion years, an O-type star exhausts its fuel in just 1-10 million years before exploding as a core-collapse supernova, often leaving behind a neutron star or black hole. Their powerful stellar winds eject material at speeds exceeding 2,000 km/s.

Notable Examples

Famous O-type stars include Alnitak (Zeta Orionis), the leftmost star of Orion's Belt at type O9.5Ib and 250,000 times the Sun's luminosity. Naos (Zeta Puppis, O4If) is one of the hottest stars visible to the naked eye at approximately 40,000 K. Theta-1 Orionis C, the brightest member of the Trapezium Cluster illuminating the Orion Nebula, is a young O6 star responsible for sculpting one of the sky's most famous nebulae. Many O stars are found in OB associations — loose groupings of young, hot stars born from the same molecular cloud.

HIP 54358HIP 54475HIP 54902HIP 55078HIP 55833HIP 55995HIP 56021HIP 56134HIP 56196HIP 56331HIP 56726HIP 56757HIP 56769HIP 56833HIP 56897HIP 56961HIP 59288HIP 61482HIP 61772HIP 61958HIP 63117HIP 63449HIP 91502HIP 118113HIP 92198HIP 92210HIP 92865HIP 93118HIP 97231HIP 97280HIP 97520HIP 97757HIP 98418HIP 98753HIP 98976HIP 99308HIP 99439HIP 99443HIP 99580HIP 99768HIP 100069HIP 100135HIP 100146HIP 100173HIP 100542HIP 101186HIP 101341HIP 101419

Sıkça Sorulan Sorular

What is a class O star?
Class O (O-type (Blue)) stars are blue stars. O-type stars are the hottest and most luminous main-sequence stars. With surface temperatures exceeding 30,000 K, they appear blue-white and emit strongly in the ultraviolet. They are extremely rare,
How hot are class O stars?
Class O stars have surface temperatures between 30,000 K and 50,000 K.
What color are class O stars?
Class O stars appear blue.
How many class O stars are in the StarFYI database?
StarFYI currently catalogs 264 class O stars.
How luminous are class O stars?
Extremely luminous, 30,000-1,000,000 solar luminosities