Considered a binary, possibly quintuplet, star system Alpha Librae has two bright main stars. The brighter of the two is a dwarf star of spectral type A3 and its companion is a yellow-white dwarf of spectral type F4.
Beta Librae is a blue dwarf star of spectral type B8
Sigma Librae (Brachium, Cornu, or Zubenalgubi ) is a star in the constellation Libra.
It has a spectral class of M3/M4 so it is a red giant.
It is a G-type star.
Alpha Librae is the second brightest star in the constellation Libra.It has an absolute magnitude of +3.28It has an apparent magnitude of +5.15
reddish
There are 6 main starts that make up the constellation, Libra. The names of these stars are, Beta Librae, Gamma Librae, Alpha Librae, Upsilon Librae, Tau Librae, and Sigma Librae.
They are Blues And Yellows..I dont really know Kinda a guess
There are 83 stars within the constellation, which have an apparent magnitude of 6.5 of brighter. The three brightest stars are:Beta Librae = Zubeneschamali Alpha Librae = Zubenelgenubi Gamma Librae = Zubenelakrab.
red star
Alpha Pavonis (Alpha Pav) is a class "B" blue-white binary star.
There is no "star alpha". Alpha is PART of the name of many stars - basically one for each constellation.
There is no longer any star called Alpha Velorum. It was split off into the constellation Carina and thus Vela does not have an alpha star.
There is no star that is simply called "Alpha". There are several that have "alpha" in their name, for example Alpha Centauri, Alpha Cruxis, Alpha Canis Majoris, etc. - usually the brightest star in each constellation. Some stars such as Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis) are not actually the brightest star in the constellation.
Aldebaran, Taurus's alpha star, is a red giant.