There is only one Sun in the Solar System, which is the 9 planets that revolve around our Sun. The sun, however, is just one ordinary and insignificant second-generation (which means it is made up of materials that came from previously exploded stars) star in a hundred billion in our Milky Way Galaxy, and there are billions more in the other galaxies that make up the universe. If you look up on the clearest of clear nights, every twinkle you see is a star burning the same fuel as our Sun, and for every one you can see there are billions that you can't.
Note:There are 9 planets including Pluto. Most authorities no longer consider Pluto to be one of the major planets.
To help understand this question, the approved definition of a Star being a Sun is "A star that is the center of a planetary system." or "any star around which a planetary system revolves" Therefore, all Suns are Stars, but not all Stars are Suns.
i found other stuff about it here, it doesn't say exactly what its made of, which makes me sort of frustrated since i couldn't find it anywhere either... but.... heres the URL anyways.:
http:/www.audioenglish.net/dictionary/celestial_body.htm
There is no way to know even approximately how many celestial bodies exist throughout the universe. We may GUESS that there are 100 billion stars in the Milky Way, and perhaps that many other galaxies besides our own.
Every one is different. Some, like the Moon and Mercury, are dry and covered with craters. Mars is red and sandy. Venus is baked in thick clouds of sulfuric acid. The Gas Giant planets are covered with thick clouds and storms, while every moon is even MORE different.
Europa may have oceans of liquid water beneath the thick ice floes, while Io is covered with sulfurous volcanoes.
We cannot even IMAGINE how different the planets of other stars must be!
The number of Elements in a Star - the Sun for one example - depends upon It's Age.
Younger Stars have fewer types of Elements while Older Stars have had much more Time to accumulate the Novae and Supernova Matter that is the source of both heavier and 'more varied' Elements.
As a rough estimate, there are around 1011 stars (suns) in our own galaxy, and there are about 1011 galaxies in the OBSERVABLE Universe. That makes an estimated 1022 stars or suns in the observable Universe.
Well, you see, the answer to this question all depends on who you are talking about. My solar system only has one sun, yes but that does not necessarily mean that yours does. It is all a matter of perspective!
Basically anything that is found in outer space. Celestial body or more commonly known as "astronomical objects" are significant physical entities, associations or structures which science has confirmed to exist in outer space.
See link for a list of objects
Not of the universe, as Copernicus conceived of it. He said that there was no single center of organization in the cosmos. But the Sun was the center of Earth's universe, which is the solar system.
Although we now know that the Sun is similarly a star orbiting in the Milky Way Galaxy, there is no known point outside the Milky Way that can be said to be the center of universal organization. So the Milky Way and its companion galaxies can just as easily be thought of as a central point.
Their names are -
1 Andromeda Galaxy
2 Canis Major Dwarf Galaxy
3 Cygus A
4 Maffie 1 & 2
5 Magellanic Clouds Galaxy
6 Virgo A
7 Milky way Galaxy
8 M81 Galaxy culster
9 Coma Galaxy cutlster
10 Tadpole Galaxy
11 Cigar Galaxy
12 Pinwheel Galaxy
13 Sombero Galaxy
14 Whirl pool Galaxy
15 NGC 1300 Galaxy
16 LMC Galaxy
17 Antennea Galaxy
18 Backward Galaxy
19 Black Eye Galaxy
20 Bode's Eye Galaxy
21 Butterfly Galaxy
22 Cart wheel Galaxy
23 Circinus Galaxy
24 Comet galaxy
25 fireworks Galaxy & etc
the system is named sol for the suns name is sol.
See related link for a pictorial.
In order to be part of a binary system there has to be two suns in the system. Our solar system has just one sun, hence we call it the sun.
The Suns mass is 1.9891 × 1030 kg or about 333,000 times that of Earth. The Sun contains about 99% of the total mass of the Solar System.
But ... there are many bodies in our Solar system that have no atmosphere.
1
Our solar system has 1, Other solar systems are unexplored at the moment....
there are about 5.3 billion suns in our solar system, each containing about 4 moons
The Sun is in the center of our solar system.
No. Our solar system just has our Sun.
Yes, the solar system is the only one in our solar system. there are other solar systems many trillions of miles away. You can see their suns, these are the stars.
all stars are suns so yes________________________TRILLIONS of them. Every star in the sky is the Sun of another solar system.
Our solar system is only a tiny fraction of the universe. Many suns exist out there somewhere, but we might not know their exact location.
The suns gravitational pull.
No planets are called suns. The Sun is the starat the center of the Solar System
Hmm. Let's have a look out side. How many Suns do I see? One. Our Solar System is not part of a binary star system, otherwise you'd see two Suns in the sky.
the system is named sol for the suns name is sol.