A star is created once enough dust/gas gather up (called nebulae) and the gravity from a nearby star or shockwave from a nearby supernova causes it to contract. Once a star dies, it blows and becomes a nebulae again, recreating the entire process over and over again to repeat until the end of time. (unless the star becomes a black hole.)
The plural form of the noun star is stars, e.g. "On a clear night, you can see hundreds of thousands of stars."
By definition, a binary star system has two stars in it.
you make no sense.=P
8 main stars and i don't about the minor star that help make up the Canis major.
Although at the end of a stars life - another "type" of star is born, they are different to the "normal" type of star and are "star" in name only. Most "remnants" of stars should be classed as degenerate stars. Our Sun (a star) will first turn into a red giant star [See related question] and then a white dwarf star [See related question]
that question doesn't make sense. there are star that are one billion times bigger than our on solar system star, how ever bigger stars live a shorter life than smaller stars!
None. Many stars make up constellations.
You make a lot of sketch star AND get a lot of likes.
An orange star is typically cooler than a purple star. Star color is related to temperature, with blue stars being the hottest, followed by white, yellow, orange, and red stars. Purple stars are not common in astronomical classifications, but if we consider purple as a blend of blue and red, then they would likely be hotter than orange stars.
A star system can have two or more stars. A star system with two stars is called a binary star system.
12 stars make up the phoenix constellation.
The word 'stars' is a noun, the plural from for the noun 'star'. Example sentence:The stars seem much brighter in the countryside away from the city lights.The word 'stars' is also a verb (star,stars, starring, starred); and an adjective (a star athlete, a star performer, etc.)