If you are asking about the "display" of stars signifying a General Officer of the US Military, they are arranged on the epaulet of the uniform in linear order for one through four stars. If a five star General of the Army, the stars are arranged in a circle.
No. Stars are not biological organisms.
No, black holes are not living organisms, but dead stars with collapsed cores and infinite gravity.
No, stars do not reproduce in the same way plants or animals do. Stars form from a process called stellar nucleosynthesis, where elements are fused together in their cores. They do not have the ability to reproduce like living organisms do.
The ophiuroidea is a group of echinoderms that include the brittle stars and basket stars. Over 60 species of this group are known to be bioluminescent or light emitting organisms.
There are a number of organisms that can reproduce by fragmentation. Some of the organisms that use this method of reproduction include annelid worms, sea stars fungi and plants among others.
Stars do not multiply like living organisms do. Stars are formed from clouds of gas and dust collapsing under their own gravity, and they can also merge together to form larger stars. However, they do not reproduce or multiply in the biological sense.
Stars, bioluminescent organisms, and reflective surfaces like mirrors can shine in the dark.
organisms die, can't see stars, mutations occur, bla bla bla
Plants are living organisms that grow into a wide variety of things, such as trees, flowers, grass, bushes, etc. Stars on the other hand are giant luminous balls of plasma that are in space, which you can see at night.
Various things such as living organisms, elements, our universe's current era of stars and the occasional unknown and known phenomenon.
Yes, sponges provide food for a number of different organisms such as nudibranchs, sea stars, fishes, and turtles.
No, sea stars are benthic organisms. Plankton means drifter, they float around for their whole lives.