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Plant Life on Earth only took 2Billion Years to evolve.
It would be impossible for those planets to have plants because plants are an earth related group it would have to be some other sort of blue life You will also never see animals or fungi because they evolved purely on earth there may be something similar but it would be so different from what we have on earth
It's not even about the color, which indicates the most massively produced type of light by wave length. It's about balancing light consumption, so it's not too much and not too few. On Earth plants do it through reflecting the most abundant wave length. But on a planet orbiting a supermassive star it should be most of its wave length spectrum, so rather whitish plants. On planets, orbiting low mass, so low light radiation stars, plants would tend to be darker in color, close to black. So a blend of brownish dark red and rather fully black plants.
Plot twist: Super-plants are all matte black.
Short answer: yes. Long answer: no
Shouldn’t that mean our plants should be closer to yellow?
Of course. Everyone gets sad sometimes, even planets. Never judge
Another problem with this is that there's no actual reason plants should match the color of their star. On Earth, they block the peak green in favor of having two separate absorption bands, but around a blue star, blocking blue would mean one of those bands will end up in the ultraviolet, which has enough energy per photon to start reacting with all sorts of molecules and even gases in the atmosphere causing all manner of photochemistry. You won't get that much UV at the surface of a planet that has analogues of plants because UV is rather damaging, so any planet without enough photochemistry to block most of it is probably gonna have drastically different organisms that need to worry about pigments meant to exclude dangerous radiation.
You meant that ~soil based~ plants took 4 billion years to evolve?
Blue is very rare in nature anyways
My hair is green, I am an alien plant
Australia has quite a few species of plants with more grey/ blueish leaves.
Do white stars have white plants? (LOL)
Yeah, but our star is yellow and our plants green (or purple).
Didn't photosynthesis start over a billion years ago though?
so your saying our sun is green? good one, genius
what about blue flower
What color would plants have if they orbited a K-type star? An orange dwarf?
purple stars dont exist
but if they did it wouldnt be visible as purple to us because the human eye is more sensitive to blue light
Lol. Purple plants. Purple is not part of the rainbow and only a human perception of blue and red.
Blue plants are possible but then a planet should orbit binary stars like one F0V class and other G1V class star. So it could possibly have blue or turquoise plants. Because there lifespan is also more and at that time life could evolve.
There is a problem for exoplanets orbiting red dwarf stars are tidaly locked so if we need red plants so a exoplanet should orbit further to not be tidaly locked but then it will be out of the habitable zone of its star. So if a planet orbiting binary red dwarf stars then it could not be tidaly locked and then it could also be in the habitable zone and can host red vegetation.
I would bet if life evolved on a planet orbiting around a blue giant like blacky and sorta a blackish red to avoid getting hot. Or white.
Goofy ah light
What about blue dwarf/subdwarf stars? They might not be all that widespread (at least now), but they might be somewhat stable for a long time, long enough for a complex life, for example.
Mass effect vibes. Aka the krogans 😂
Alien vegetation can be blue, but only if they are sad.
What about when a red dwarf is old enough to become a blue dwarf? If life could form there and last that long, would plant life turn blueish?