Comment A correction/explanation (Score 5, Informative) 291
As an astronomy graduate student, I would like to offer a correction or an explanation of this statement:
From the article:
"That's because the older a star gets, the redder it gets, he says. Younger stars are bluer."
Kinda true, but the point is something else. A young *cluster* of stars will look blue because brightest stars in a young cluster are blue, massive stars. These blue bright stars burn their fuel (Hydrogen) very fast and have short lives (~100 Million years). When blue bright stars go away, more numerous, but much fainter, red stars start to dominate the color of the cluster. Therefore, as the *cluster* gets older, it gets redder.
From the article:
"That's because the older a star gets, the redder it gets, he says. Younger stars are bluer."
Kinda true, but the point is something else. A young *cluster* of stars will look blue because brightest stars in a young cluster are blue, massive stars. These blue bright stars burn their fuel (Hydrogen) very fast and have short lives (~100 Million years). When blue bright stars go away, more numerous, but much fainter, red stars start to dominate the color of the cluster. Therefore, as the *cluster* gets older, it gets redder.