and its components highlighted Most of the stars occupy the region in the diagram along the line called the
main sequence, with low-mass stars at the cooler and less luminous end of the sequence, and more massive stars towards the hotter and more luminous end. During the stage of their lives in which stars are found on the main sequence line, they are
fusing hydrogen in their cores. A prominent group of cool stars is found at higher luminosities, and larger sizes, than main-sequence stars. These are known as
red giants and include: stars fusing hydrogen around an inert helium core, the red giant branch; stars fusing helium in their cores, the
horizontal branch; and stars fusing helium and hydrogen in shells around a largely-inert core, the
asymptotic giant branch. The red giants are separated from the main sequence by the
Hertzsprung gap, populated by
subgiants and located in the region between A5 and G0 spectral type and between +1 and −3 absolute magnitudes. Other groups of stars distinguished in the HR diagram are:
supergiants, rare evolved massive stars prominent because of their high luminosity;
white dwarfs, very common but with very low luminosities; and
brown dwarfs, very cool and with very low luminosities.
RR Lyrae variable stars are horizontal-branch stars in a section of the diagram called the
instability strip.
Cepheid variables also fall on the instability strip, at higher luminosities. The H-R diagram can be used by scientists to roughly measure how far away a
star cluster or
galaxy is from Earth. This can be done by comparing the apparent magnitudes of the stars in the cluster to the absolute magnitudes of stars with known distances (or of model stars). The observed group is then shifted in the vertical direction, until the two main sequences overlap. The difference in magnitude that was bridged in order to match the two groups is called the
distance modulus and is a direct measure for the distance (ignoring
extinction). This technique is known as
main sequence fitting and is a type of
spectroscopic parallax. Not only the turn-off in the main sequence can be used, but also the tip of the red giant branch stars.
The diagram seen by ESA's Gaia mission ESA's
Gaia mission showed several features in the diagram that were either not known or that were suspected to exist. It found a gap in the main sequence that appears for
M-dwarfs and that is explained with the transition from a partly convective core to a fully convective core. For
white dwarfs the diagram shows several features. Two main concentrations appear in this diagram following the cooling sequence of white dwarfs that are explained with the atmospheric composition of white dwarfs, especially
hydrogen versus
helium dominated atmospheres of white dwarfs. A third concentration is explained with core crystallization of the white dwarfs interior. This releases energy and delays the cooling of white dwarfs. ==Role in the development of stellar physics==