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The Sun will spend a total of approximately 10 billion years as a main-sequence star.
Right now, our Sun is a main-sequence star, not a red giant.
It may stay a main-sequence star, looking about the same, for billions of years.
These represent the final evolutionary stage of many main-sequence stars.
It is a main-sequence star with a stellar classification of G8.
Astrophysicists say our Sun is a main-sequence star in the middle of its life.
It is a yellow main-sequence star of spectral type G3.
At this point the Sun became a main-sequence star.
The primary is a main-sequence star of type B5.
Surface activity appears to be related to the age and rotation rate of main-sequence stars.
You can see an example of the band of main-sequence stars to the right.
A hot, luminous main-sequence star may also be referred to as a giant.
It is near the end of its life as a main-sequence star that fuses hydrogen.
All main-sequence stars have a core region where energy is generated by nuclear fusion.
This relationship applies to main-sequence stars in the range 0.1-50 solar masses.
On average, main-sequence stars are known to follow an empirical mass-luminosity relationship.
Of course most people have never seen an M-class main-sequence star, certainly not bright enough to notice color.
This makes it shine very brightly and become what astronomers think of as a main-sequence star.
Methane absorption is not expected at the temperatures of main-sequence stars.
In a normal star, like our Sun and all other main-sequence stars, this change happens at the very center of the star.
"The only thing that looks bright enough to be a nearby main-sequence star is that one there."
"Which is most unusual, because main-sequence stars typically expand and cool for billions of years before such an event."
The star system is composed of two K- type main-sequence stars:
The Sun has steadily increased in luminosity over the course of its life, increasing by 40% since it first became a main-sequence star.
With an age of roughly 6 billion years, it is slightly older than the Sun, but is still a main-sequence star.