It is quite possible that the sun will turn into a Planetary Nebula. Planetary Nebulae are created when a star less than 8 solar masses turn into red giant stars. It can expel its outer shell by solar winds and also pulsing. These radiate out as planetary nebulae. Stars larger than 8 solar masses also undergo this process but normally end up as a supernova completely scattering the nebula.
No. A shooting star is not a star; it only looks like one. A shooting star is a speck of dust that enters our atmosphere; nothing a solar system (or a sun) could form from.
No. A shooting star is not a star; it only looks like one. A shooting star is a speck of dust that enters our atmosphere; nothing a solar system (or a sun) could form from.
No. A shooting star is not a star; it only looks like one. A shooting star is a speck of dust that enters our atmosphere; nothing a solar system (or a sun) could form from.
No. A shooting star is not a star; it only looks like one. A shooting star is a speck of dust that enters our atmosphere; nothing a solar system (or a sun) could form from.
If you mean, that our planet Earth revolves around another star instead of the Sun, that's possible, but higly unlikely.
If you mean, that our planet Earth revolves around another star instead of the Sun, that's possible, but higly unlikely.
If you mean, that our planet Earth revolves around another star instead of the Sun, that's possible, but higly unlikely.
If you mean, that our planet Earth revolves around another star instead of the Sun, that's possible, but higly unlikely.
Due to the fact that the sun is significantly younger than the universe itself, (the universe is about 13.75 billion years old give or take about 0.11 billion years (110,000,000 years), which is a pretty accurate measurement, and the sun is roughly 4.57 billion years old) it is likely that the sun would have formed from the dust from a nebula, and as the sun is relatively young, this would support this evidence for this kind of formation. However, there is next to no evidence of remnants of the proposed nebula our sun came from, so although it seems likely, it would be very hard to prove.
Hope this helps!
No. Shooting stars are meteors, which are significantly smaller than the sun. The Sun itself, is a star. Stars are really "suns" themselves.
no because when its ready to reach earth it gets littler and litter and bout time it gets close to earth it turns into a meteorite
No. A shooting star is not a star; it only looks like one. A shooting star is a speck of dust that enters our atmosphere; nothing a solar system (or a sun) could form from.
If you mean, that our planet Earth revolves around another star instead of the Sun, that's possible, but higly unlikely.
Not unless it gathers much more mass. It will likely become a white dwarf.
it goes boom
No one will ever know without visiting one but humans can't live on shooting stars.
A regular star is like the sun, only very far away.A shooting star is not a star. It is a meteor entering the earth's atmosphere and burning up. This is the long light streak you may see briefly in the night sky.
The object does not have to be very big. have you ever had one of your kids run in and scream "I saw a shooting star!"? you think it is their imagination run wild don't you? most likely, they saw just that. That shooting star is usually just a satellite reflecting the sun's rays down to earth, looking like a small star crossing the sky. a satellite moves very fast, making that look of "shooting".The answer is "about 30x30 FT".
Shooting stars are meteors, however some people may believe that a shooting star is like a falling star. However stars are like our sun, remember so they cannot fall. When a star dies it will go supernova (explode). The nearest star to us is Beetle-juice, which will go supernova any day now to the next million years. When it goes supernova it will look like another sun in the sky.
orbits the sun
because the shooting star of the shooting star in the galaxy is parr and the field goal of the meteor has to give a striaght parabala and right axis toward the sun.
it goes boom
we know that the star that earth orbits is the sun the sun is the biggest star ever
It happens all the time. What happens to the Sun? Nothing at all.
The Sun. If not for the Sun, we wouldn't ever look at any other star.
No. A shooting star is a meteor streaking across the sky. A burned out star is the remains of a sun that has burned off all of it's fuel. It's usually called a "white dwarf".
No one will ever know without visiting one but humans can't live on shooting stars.
A regular star is like the sun, only very far away.A shooting star is not a star. It is a meteor entering the earth's atmosphere and burning up. This is the long light streak you may see briefly in the night sky.
The object does not have to be very big. have you ever had one of your kids run in and scream "I saw a shooting star!"? you think it is their imagination run wild don't you? most likely, they saw just that. That shooting star is usually just a satellite reflecting the sun's rays down to earth, looking like a small star crossing the sky. a satellite moves very fast, making that look of "shooting".The answer is "about 30x30 FT".
The Shooting Star was created in 1942.
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