The common mistake people make is that 'Sun' is the name of any burning gas in space when atually this isn't true.
The Sun that we know is a star that scientists have named 'The Sun' so it's just a name like 'earth' or 'jupiter'
As for your question, scientists estimate that there are billions and billions of star throughout the universe so you would need to define your question.
There is now exact number, because our 'Sun' like others is a star. so technically the stars are 'Suns'
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
Pierre Janssen, who was a French astronomer discovered helium in 1868. It was the English astronomer Norman Lockyer who proposed the name helium after the Greek name of the sun, Helios.
Because helium was discovered by spectral methods in the Sun.
Helium (He) was named from the greek word helios=sun. Helium was given that name because it was first discovered at the spectrum of the chromosphere of sun.
Nothing. The sun will look almost the same as it does today in 2 million years. The Sun has a lifetime of about 10 billionyears, and it's about halfway along; the solar system is about 4.5 billion years old.
Saturn does not have its own sun and it has 60 moons and some were just discovered a few years ago
Helium. It was discovered on the Sun many years before it was discovered on Earth.
Helium was first discovered in 1868 (145 years ago) in the sun and get its name from the Greek word, Helios, meaning the sun. So 200 years back helium was unknown and doesn't have a name.
It is estimated that the sun formed into a star about 4.57 billion years ago.
No. The sun was a protostar about 4.6 billion years ago.
It was discovered in 1774 when Europeans looked up for the first time in history... No. Actually, there are tons of rough estimates, but no real answers everyone can settle on. I've seen people estimating from one million years ago to two billion years ago.
Our Sun did not exist till about five billion years ago.
The sun was roughly 4.6 billion years old a million years ago. The margin for error on the estimated age of the sun is more than a million years.
The Sun
The planets have been orbiting the Sun for a very long time. However, Neptune has the longest year, about 165 Earth-years long, and since it was only discovered in 1846, 166 Earth-years ago, it has only made one orbit since it was discovered.
4billion
probably someone from a long time ago