Are There Really Green Stars in Our Universe?

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Green stars do not exist in the universe as stars that peak in the green wavelength emit a combination of visible wavelengths that appear white to the human eye. The colors of stars are primarily red, white/yellow, and blue, corresponding to their temperatures, with cold stars appearing red and hot stars blue. While some stars may appear green in certain contexts, such as in subjective comparisons, they do not emit predominantly green light. Observing star color is best done in loose clusters, where contrasting colors like the gold and blue of Alberio can be appreciated. The perception of star colors is influenced by the presence of other wavelengths, making true green stars an optical illusion rather than a reality.
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I was out in my backyard performing some astronomic observations for azimuth and latitude and was treated to a few of the recent meteors. I have seen a few different colored ones and it got me to wondering. I have heard of red, blue, white and other colored stars, but don't ever remember hearing about a green one.
So, are there any green stars?
And what other colors are missing?
 
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The color of stars are mostly just red white/yellow and blue; this is because they're very rough classes referring to the temperature (and therefore peak luminosity of the stars). Cold stars are red, moderate - white/yellow, and hot - blue. All of these stars appear fairly white (yellow with atmospheric effects) when looking at the entire visible band.
 
There are stars that are pretty green, but star colors are most evident in subjective comparisons, star-to-star. Loose clusters are great for this. The double cluster is a nice place to browse with a decent 'scope to identify various colors. One decent example of subjective color-perception is Alberio. The pairing of gold and blue stars is fairly striking when you see them together - either alone would be less remarkable.
 
The post is mostly accurate but a tiny bit misleading. You Do not need only green light to perceive the color green; you just need more green light than what is available from a blackbody radiator.

A great example of a natural spectrum that closely mimics the solar blackbody emission but looks very green is the sulpher plasma.
 
Thank you gentlemen,
If the kids ever ask, I'll have this one covered.
Dad is looking smarter all the time.
...except to the wife, of course...
 
There are also Orange stars such as Betelgeuse, Antares, Aldebaran, Arcturus and Pollux, all of which are clearly of orange or red hue.
 
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