stellar classification
I don't have specific context provided about G-type main-sequence stars to base an accurate overview on. To write a plain-language explanation that meets your requirement of being based "ONLY on this context," I would need you to provide the relevant information about G-type main-sequence stars from your source material. Could you please share the context you'd like me to use?
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
via Wikipedia infobox
A G-type main-sequence star is a main-sequence star of spectral type G. The spectral luminosity class is V. Such a star has about 0.9 to 1.1 solar masses and an effective temperature between about 5,300 and 6,000 K (5,000 and 5,700 °C; 9,100 and 10,000 °F). Like other main-sequence stars, a G-type main-sequence star converts the element hydrogen to helium in its core by means of nuclear fusion.
The Sun is an example of a G-type main-sequence star (more specifically a G2V star). Each second, the Sun fuses approximately 600 million tons of hydrogen into helium in a process known as the proton–proton chain (4 hydrogens form 1 helium), converting about 4 million tons of matter to energy. Besides the Sun, other well-known examples of G-type main-sequence stars include Alpha Centauri, Tau Ceti, and 51 Pegasi.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).