10 Rarest Type of Stars

White Dwarfs: Extremely dense remnants of low to medium mass stars, often smaller than Earth but with a mass comparable to the Sun.

Neutron Stars: Formed from the remnants of massive stars after supernova explosions, they are incredibly dense and spin rapidly.

Red Giants: Large stars in the late stages of their evolution, characterized by their immense size and low surface temperature.

Blue Supergiants: Extremely massive and luminous stars, often with a short lifespan before exploding as supernovae.

Wolf-Rayet Stars: Hot, massive stars that are rapidly losing mass through powerful stellar winds.

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Pulsars: Neutron stars that emit beams of radiation that sweep across space like lighthouse beams as they rotate.

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Carbon Stars: Cool, red giants with an unusually high amount of carbon in their atmospheres, giving them a distinctive reddish hue.

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Binary Stars: Systems of two stars orbiting around a common center of mass, ranging from close binaries to wide binaries.

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Yellow Hypergiants: Extremely rare and luminous stars nearing the end of their lives, often experiencing violent outbursts.

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Thorne–Żytkow Objects: Theoretical hybrid stars resulting from the collision of a neutron star with a red giant, yet to be conclusively observed.

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