The sun is not truly made of fire. It is made of plasma. Other stars are the same in this regard, though they vary in hot hot they are.
Well its a big ball of gas so stars are made out of fire.
Stars are made of very very hot gas inside a star are nuclei but mostly electricity on the center of a star is ice stones mostly iron or any other things that the gravity of the stars attract
It is because the sun is a gigantic star, and stars are made from fire
Stars are also made out of helium, calcium, and potassium. Neutrons stars and plasma stars are also common.
Not starlight, but the material we are made of was made in stars. All elements heavier than helium, except for a small amount of lithium, are made in stars. All elements heavier than iron come from supernovae.
air, water, earth, fire, and the quintessence, the stuff stars are made of.
No. The "fire" of a star is not really fire. Fire as we think of it is combustion; a process by which some flammable substance undergoes a chemical reaction with oxygen. Stars are powered by nuclear fusion instead. In this process, hydrogen atoms fuse together to form helium. Nuclear fusion is millions of times more efficient than combustion. What looks like fire in a star is really plasma heated by this reaction.
shooting stars are meteors which are made from rock and other metals like iron
Well, it has stars, but it also has some other stuff.
The Mayans
Stars are mostly made of hydrogen and helium, with trace amounts of other elements like carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen.
Hydrogen?