In the early part of the 20th century, information about the types and distances of
stars became more readily available. The
spectra of stars were shown to have distinctive features, which allowed them to be categorized.
Annie Jump Cannon and
Edward Charles Pickering at
Harvard College Observatory developed a method of categorization that became known as the
Harvard Classification Scheme, published in the
Harvard Annals in 1901. In
Potsdam in 1906, the Danish astronomer
Ejnar Hertzsprung noticed that the reddest stars—classified as K and M in the Harvard scheme—could be divided into two distinct groups. These stars are either much brighter than the Sun or much fainter. To distinguish these groups, he called them "giant" and "dwarf" stars. The following year he began studying
star clusters; large groupings of stars that are co-located at approximately the same distance. For these stars, he published the first plots of color versus
luminosity. These plots showed a prominent and continuous sequence of stars, which he named the Main Sequence. At
Princeton University,
Henry Norris Russell was following a similar course of research. He was studying the relationship between the spectral classification of stars and their actual brightness as corrected for distance—their
absolute magnitude. For this purpose, he used a set of stars that had reliable
parallaxes and many of which had been categorized at Harvard. When he plotted the spectral types of these stars against their absolute magnitude, he found that dwarf stars followed a distinct relationship. This allowed the real brightness of a dwarf star to be predicted with reasonable accuracy. Of the red stars observed by Hertzsprung, the dwarf stars also followed the spectra-luminosity relationship discovered by Russell. However, giant stars are much brighter than dwarfs and so do not follow the same relationship. Russell proposed that "giant stars must have low density or great surface brightness, and the reverse is true of dwarf stars". The same curve also showed that there were very few faint white stars. In 1933,
Bengt Strömgren introduced the term Hertzsprung–Russell diagram to denote a luminosity-spectral class diagram. This name reflected the parallel development of this technique by both Hertzsprung and Russell earlier in the century. As evolutionary models of stars were developed during the 1930s, it was shown that, for stars with the same composition, the star's mass determines its luminosity and radius. Conversely, when a star's chemical composition and its position on the main sequence are known, the star's mass and radius can be deduced. This became known as the
Vogt–Russell theorem; named after
Heinrich Vogt and Henry Norris Russell. It was subsequently discovered that this relationship breaks down somewhat for stars of the non-uniform composition. A refined scheme for
stellar classification was published in 1943 by
William Wilson Morgan and
Philip Childs Keenan. The MK classification assigned each star a spectral type—based on the Harvard classification—and a
luminosity class. The Harvard classification had been developed by assigning a different letter to each star based on the strength of the hydrogen spectral line before the relationship between spectra and temperature was known. When ordered by temperature and when duplicate classes were removed, the
spectral types of stars followed, in order of decreasing temperature with colors ranging from blue to red, the sequence O, B, A, F, G, K, and M. (A popular
mnemonic for memorizing this sequence of stellar classes is "Oh Be A Fine Girl/Guy, Kiss Me".) The luminosity class ranged from I to V, in order of decreasing luminosity. Stars of luminosity class V belonged to the main sequence. In April 2018, astronomers reported the detection of the most distant "ordinary" (i.e., main sequence)
star, named
Icarus (formally,
MACS J1149 Lensed Star 1), at 9 billion light-years away from
Earth. == Formation and evolution ==