No. In order to be considered a planet an object must have enough mass to be made round by its own gravity. Nothing as small as a head would be anywhere close to the necessary mass. Head-sized objects do orbit the sun, but they are called meteoroids.
the planet uranus
No. Planets look smaller than the sun because they actually are smaller.
Well,planets do not have any light of their own so they are definitely not brighter and yes there may be some stars smaller than the planets but most of the stars are bigger than the planets . But on the whole the Space is not that much explored so that we can get any cumulative answer.
Pluto, although it isn't a proper planet is smaller than the moon
No, its smaller than all eight planets. It not even the largest dwarf planet.
Yes Pluto is different than the outer planets in the following ways:Pluto has not cleared its orbit of asteroids and debrisPluto is not made of gasPluto is far smaller than any of the outer planets
It is much smaller than any other planet, therefore they have a whole new category called Plutoids which is where Pluto is now classified under.
Pluto is smaller than any of the eight planets. Also, it hasn't "cleared its surroundings" - I guess that basically this means that it is not the dominant object in the surroundings of its orbit.
The planet Earth is the largest of the four rocky inner planets; it is smaller than any of the four gas giants.
It is the biggest the rock-like planets but is smaller than any of the gas planets. This makes it the fifth largest planet in the solar system
The planet Venus is just slightly smaller than the Earth. It is larger than either Mars or Mercury, and it is much smaller than any of the four gas giants.
Earth is the biggest of the terrestrial or rocky planets, but smaller than any of the gas giants.