Yes - through nuclear fusion.
No, the sun gives light to the moon, but not the stars. the stars give their own light.
Galaxies are made partly of stars, which produce light. So, in that sense, yes.
All stars do ... sort of by definition.
No it does not it gets its light from the reflection of the sun Yes, the moon does reflect light from the sun however the moon doesn't produce it's own light.
Planets and comets shine because of reflected light because they do not produce their own light. Stars are enormous balls of gas that are undergoing fusion which releases a very large amount of energy in the electromagnetic spectrum which includes visible light. So stars shine because they produce their own light and not because they reflect light.
Stars produce their own light just like a fire or light bulb. Different stars actually have different colours depending on their size and age.
Only a small fraction of space objects produce their own light. The primary objects that do are stars, which generate light through nuclear fusion in their cores. Other celestial bodies like planets and moons do not emit their own light but reflect the light of stars. Additionally, some phenomena like supernovae and certain types of nebulae can produce their own light temporarily.
nebula
Moons and comets appear to shine because of the light they reflect. Stars produce their own light.
No, planets don't give off light, stars did.
It does not have visible light of its own, that lite is provided by the shine of the stars in it and or around it.
Incandescent means that the object can produce its own light like the stars