Yes, there are many stars hotter than our own Sun. The redder a sun, the cooler it is, whereas the whiter or bluer a sun is, the hotter it is. There are literally billions of white and blue stars out in the universe.
There are other suns. Every star is a sun. Some may have planets orbiting them. Many stars come in groups of two and orbit each other.
All stars are suns, but not necessarily at the centre of solar systems like ours.
You don't even have to go to other galaxies to find other suns. There are somewhere between 200 and 400 billion other stars right here in the same galaxy that we live in.
In fact, our own Sun is a star. Every star you see in the sky at night, is a Sun out in the universe.
We don't know how much suns are in the Milky Way galaxy, but so far I know that there is one sun in the solar system: Our Sun (the star that Mercury is nearest in). But the sun of the extrasolar planets (also classified or considered as exoplanets) is named HR8799 which is in the middle of the exoplanets.
You might say that.
You don't even have to go to other galaxies to find other suns. There are somewhere between 200 and 400 billionother stars right here in the same galaxy that we live in. And every star is a sun.
Nobody knows.
There are potentially millions of moons and suns in the galaxy alone, let alone the universe.
With our current technology, it's impossible to discover and count them all.
There are an estimated 200-400 billion stars (suns) in our Milky Way. (It is not known with great precision how many red dwarves there are, since they are difficult to detect.) Other galaxies may be larger, or smaller, than our Milky Way, i.e., the are galaxies that much more stars... or much less.
In our solar system there is only one sun, but outside the solar system, every star is a sun.
Our Sun is a Star. The Universe is filled with stars, so your answer would be yes.
The sun is actually one of the least hottest stars in the classification of stars.
our sun compared to other stars falls in the category of pretty average because our sun isn't to small or to big which helps support life on earth, itis also yellow which isn't veryhot because the hottest stars are blue or white. our sun is also in its main sequence ( like 90% of the rest of the stars
what is unusual about the sun compared to many other stars ?????#
Nuclear fusion is the process that powers stars, such as our sun.
The sun is a star itself. The sun is actually a very small star. There are stars that are WAY bigger then the sun.Like the VY Canis majoris star. The sun is invisible compared to that super giant star.
Our sun is a star - like the others
the properties that the sun has in common with other stars is that its made of hot gases and is also a star
No. The sun is a star like any other; it holds no special place in the galaxy. The stars, including the sun, orbit the center of the galaxy. There are also stars in other galaxies.
The sun is larger than some of the other stars. There are many stars that are larger than the sun.
The fusion of atoms powers the sun and other stars!
Yes, all stars' are suns'.
No, the sun and other stars are not living things.
the sun is closer ot the earth than the other stars are .
the sun is closer ot the earth than the other stars are .
The stars are always "out" ... 24/7/365 ... in huge numbers. On earth, because of the air, you can't see the other stars when the sun is in the sky. But on the moon, where there is no air, the stars are visible even when the sun is also 'out'.
The Sun is closer that any other star to us, there for the sun looks larger than other stars. The sun is actually small in comparison to other stars.
our sun compared to other stars falls in the category of pretty average because our sun isn't to small or to big which helps support life on earth, itis also yellow which isn't veryhot because the hottest stars are blue or white. our sun is also in its main sequence ( like 90% of the rest of the stars
The main difference between the sun and other stars is that the sun is much closer to us.