TSV

Stellar Spectral Classification - TSV

The Stellar Spectral Classification is a classification system developed by Annie Jump Cannon and colleagues at Harvard College Observatory between 1918 and 1924. It categorizes stars into ten types (O, B, A, F, G, K, M, L, T, Y) based on surface temperature, systematically organizing everything from the hottest blue giants to the coolest brown dwarfs. This classification was formally adopted by the precursor to the International Astronomical Union in 1922 and remains the standard classification system used worldwide in astronomy today.

astronomy stars spectral classification Harvard classification surface temperature brown dwarfs
code	slug	name	description	abundance_percent	color	example_stars	lifespan	mass_solar_max	mass_solar_min	mass_solar_typical	temperature_max_kelvin	temperature_min_kelvin	temperature_note	temperature_typical_kelvin	mass_jupiter_max	mass_jupiter_min	mass_jupiter_typical	object_type
O	o-type	O-type Star	The hottest and most massive blue giant stars.	<1	Blue	["Zeta Ophiuchi","Lambda Orionis","Theta1 Orionis C"]	5-6 million years	150	16	30	50000	28000	Some subdwarfs can exceed 100,000K					
B	b-type	B-type Star	Hot blue-white massive stars.	0.13	Blue-white	["Rigel","Spica","Regulus"]	~300 million years	16	2.1	7	30000	10000		15000				
A	a-type	A-type Star	White stars with the strongest hydrogen lines.	0.625	White	["Sirius A","Vega","Altair","Fomalhaut"]	1-2 billion years	2.1	1.4	1.7	10000	7400		8500				
F	f-type	F-type Star	Yellow-white stars with intermediate temperature.	3	Yellow-white	["Procyon A","Polaris Aa","Canopus"]	4-8 billion years	1.4	1	1.2	7500	6000		6700				
G	g-type	G-type Star (Yellow Dwarf)	Yellow main-sequence stars like our Sun.	7.5	Yellow	["Sun","Alpha Centauri A","Tau Ceti","51 Pegasi"]	~10 billion years (for solar mass)	1.15	0.8	1	6000	5200		5778				
K	k-type	K-type Star (Orange Dwarf)	Orange main-sequence stars cooler than the Sun.	12	Orange	["Epsilon Eridani","Alpha Centauri B","61 Cygni A"]	17-70 billion years	0.8	0.5	0.65	5200	3900		4500				
M	m-type	M-type Star (Red Dwarf)	The most common and longest-lived red main-sequence stars.	75	Red	["Proxima Centauri","Barnard's Star","TRAPPIST-1","Wolf 359"]	1-10 trillion years	0.5	0.08	0.3	3900	2400		3200				
L	l-type	L-type Dwarf	Cool brown dwarfs with water and metal hydride absorption.		Dark red	["2MASS J0523-1403","DENIS-P J1228.2-1547"]					2500	1300		1900	65	13	30	Brown dwarf or cool star
T	t-type	T-type Dwarf	Cool brown dwarfs with methane absorption bands.		Magenta/Black	["Gliese 570 D","WISE J0350-5658","2MASS J0559-1404"]					1500	600		1000	80	13	50	Brown dwarf
Y	y-type	Y-type Dwarf	The coldest brown dwarfs with ammonia absorption features.		Black (detectable only in infrared)	["WISE J0855-0714","WISE J1828+2650","WISE J1738+2732"]					600	200		400	80	13	50	Brown dwarf