No. There are an unimaginable number of billions of stars, just in the part of the
universe that we're able to see with our largest astronomical instruments, and
our sun is just one of them.
because the sun is actually a star
It's transmitted by stars and our sun :D
The sun is a star. For mass and size: Stars come in various sizes in masses and you will find smaller and bigger stars than our sun.
When the sun goes up, and the stars come down.
Because the sun is a star.
stars come in a variety of colors. red, bright blue, yellow like our sun and even white. stars come in many different sizes too from 10 times the size of our sun to the size of a small island.
there are lots of suns, we just call them stars. our nearest star is the Sun, but there are also many more.
Stars with more than about 80% of the Sun's mass behave like the Sun. They should eventually become red giant stars then white dwarf stars. Stars with mass of between about 8% and 80% of the Sun's mass are red dwarf stars. Below that come the "brown dwarfs, which aren't really true stars at all. The red dwarfs cannot fuse helium, so they simply become "white dwarf" stars when they have used up all their hydrogen "fuel".
All stars are sun or sun is the star both are same.
It is estimated that you could fit about 1.3 million Earths inside the Sun. If we assume all stars are similar in size to our Sun, then you could fit roughly 1.3 million stars inside the Sun. However, stars come in various sizes, so the actual number could be higher or lower.
StarsBecause the stars are bright like the sun so we can only see the sun in the day though they are still there. MoonBecause the moon is around at the other side of the earth when it is day.
Carbon does not come directly from the sun. Instead, carbon is produced in stars through nuclear fusion during their life cycles and released into space when stars explode as supernovae. This carbon then becomes part of dust and gas clouds that can form new stars and planets, including Earth, where it is essential for life.