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Re: Are there green, purple and pink stars?
As an aside, star colors (as seen through high-quality small telescopes) can vary greatly. Ever looked at Alberio (binary) through a really good refractor? The contrast of the rich gold and the blue is amazing. And that's just through human eyes that are notoriously crappy at differentiating colors in weak sources. Digital sensors have revealed a much wider range of star colors in recent years, and yes, stars do peak at some "interesting" frequencies to give some more colors that we are not used to seeing visually.
How many here have spent much time looking at the great Orion nebula? Even in really ideal conditions, the human eye has a hard time registering much more than a pale green. Photographic emulsions and digital sensors show us pinks, reds, blues, purples, etc. Let's not get too anthropomorphic regarding the colors of astronomical objects. We are, after all, collecting very few photons from very distant emitters, and trying to integrate them. Our eyes and brains cannot integrate faint signals over time. Film and digital sensors can. Which is real?
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