DrClaude said:
If you plot the blackbdy emission curve for a temperature where the peak emission is at the wavelength for green light, you will see that it covers the entire visible spectrum nearly uniformly. Such light therefore looks white, not green. This is the same reason why there are no green stars.
That's not quite it.
White is a perception. It does not have to equate to uniform, or even nearly uniform, power across the visible spectrum.
In effect, white is any combination of wavelengths which generates the same response ratios from our three types of cone as does the ambient light from the sun.
The sun appears yellow (from Earth's surface) because the bluer light is scattered in the atmosphere, making it yellow relative to ambient light. In space, the sun looks white.
The eye adapts quite a lot. You might regard a wall as painted pure white, only to realize it's a bit yellow or a bit pink when a whiter piece of paper is placed against it.
There's an important distinction between what happens at modest energies and what happens at arbitrarily high energies. (I'll only discuss atomic behaviour, but there are also effects at the molecular level.) I'm sure other posters on this thread know more about this than I do, but it does not seem to have been discussed.
At modest energies the emission/absorption is associated with electrons jumping between bound states. Since these have defined energy levels, only specific wavelengths are absorbed/emitted. (There is some blurring from quantum and Doppler effects.) Reflection occurs when the incoming light fails to match available transitions.
At higher energies, transitions can occur between bound and free states. Since there is no upper limit to the energy of a free state, a continuous spectrum arises.
A sufficient mixture of materials can offer so many transition energies that the spectrum is more less continuous even at modest energies.
Glowing red hot or white hot typically represents such continuous or near-continuous spectra. White hot would correspond to reaching temperatures similar to that of the sun's surface.
As mentioned, some stars are hot enough to glow blue to the eye (except, not with enough intensity to stimulate blue cones to the naked eye). I think that needs a temperature of around 10,000K.
Edit: "
Transmission occurs when ..."