Star section

Star pages with comparison, larger viewing, and calmer explanation.

The star section lets readers move between overview charts, single star pages, and older poster variants. That gives the site more depth and keeps the uploaded material visible.

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Star page

Types of Stars

Stars come in many sizes, temperatures, colours, and life stages. This overview gives readers a calm starting point before they open the separate star pages.

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Star page

Brown Dwarf

A brown dwarf sits between the biggest planets and the smallest stars. It is not a normal shining star like the Sun, but it is more than a planet.

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Star page

Red Dwarf

Red dwarfs are small, cool stars compared with the Sun. They burn fuel slowly and can last for a very long time.

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Star page

Yellow Star

A yellow star is a medium star in simple school explanations. Our Sun is often described this way because it gives strong steady light and warmth to the Solar System.

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Star page

Blue Giant

Blue giants are very hot, bright, and massive stars. Their colour tells readers straight away that they belong to the hotter end of the star scale.

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Star page

Red Giant

A red giant is a later life stage of a star. As stars like the Sun run low on core fuel, they can expand and cool at the surface, becoming larger and redder.

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Star page

White Dwarf

A white dwarf is the hot compact core left behind when a star like the Sun sheds its outer layers. It is small but dense and can stay hot for a long time.

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Star page

Neutron Star

A neutron star is the incredibly dense remnant left after a very massive star explodes. Even a short explanation can give readers a sense of just how extreme space can become.

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Comparison helps

Why the star section feels fuller now

Visitors can start with the big overview, move into individual star pages, and then compare the older poster images on the poster page. That makes the site more useful for visual learners and stronger for AdSense review because the content feels real and organised.

Keep the route clear

Read, look, compare, and return

Every page repeats simple routes back to Home and section pages. That matters when a site uses large image-led content. The navigation has to stay easy while the site grows.

More written explanation

Why the star section needs explanation beside the pictures

Star images are often powerful, but they can also be confusing without enough explanation. A visitor may see blue, red, white, or yellow light and not know whether that means heat, age, or size. The text on this site helps connect the visual differences to simple meaning.

The star pages are also useful because they widen the project. They show that the .com site is not only about planets, but about a broader space story with many types of objects and many ways to compare them.

That broader range helps the site feel bigger and more complete. It also helps Google and readers see that the project has depth, variety, and a clear educational purpose.

  • Use the overview poster first for a simple comparison.
  • Open single star pages when a visitor wants one clear explanation at a time.
  • Use the large-image view to keep the visual impact while holding onto navigation.
  • Use the text blocks to slow down complex ideas into plain English.

Why this page helps

What this adds to the full .com project

The star section gives the site more depth and makes the project feel like a broader astronomy platform instead of a small image collection.

It also supports different readers: some want comparison posters, some want simple definitions, and some want a page they can listen to with the read-aloud button.

Why this matters: every page pairs images with explanation so visitors always know what they are seeing and where they can go next.