that the Sun is from the Earth, assuming our eyes could handle this much brightness. By this distance I mean the front of the star facing earth to be this distance.
-
a very light blue almost white, the hottest stars are the brightest and there surface colour is blue. The hottest stars aren't generally supergiants though, they are probably still in the main sequence
-
I don't know if the earth would have an atmosphere. A star that big could potentially be much hotter than the Sun, which could be enough to evaporate the atmosphere. You should specify the stellar classification that the supergiant star falls under.
-
The largest star known is VY Canis Majoris, a *red* hyper-giant. For there even to be an atmosphere if Earth was next to this monster, it would have to be well over 800 times our current distance from the sun away from it.
-
Well, we'd actually be *inside* the star.... the largest stars are nearly the size of Jupiter's orbit - so we'd be on the edge of the outer core of the star...
-
The sky would be extremely bright, and still blue.
-
LOL, reading ur question was funny..
The sky would appear this huge... red... massive.. star..
The earth would probably be without an atmosphere after heat from star would boil earth to the crust.
The sky would appear this huge... red... massive.. star..
The earth would probably be without an atmosphere after heat from star would boil earth to the crust.
-
Red im guessing