yes
No. Stars are made primarily of hydrogen and helium. They produce enormous amounts of heat but are not made of heat.
Stars are hotter than planets. Stars are massive balls of gas that produce heat and light through nuclear reactions in their cores, while planets do not produce their own heat and rely on the heat they receive from the star they orbit.
Oh, dude, the noun in that sentence is "Stars." It's like the main character of the sentence, the one doing all the work to create light and heat. Without it, the whole sentence would just be like, "Create light and heat," which is pretty boring if you ask me.
Yes, but apart from the Sun, the stars are too far away for their heat to affect Earth.
The heat and the light in stars is the same thermal nuclear fission that our Sun (a star) produces.
Yes, stars radiate heat energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation, which includes visible light, ultraviolet light, and infrared radiation. This is how stars produce light and heat that we can see and feel from Earth.
Small stars are realtively smaller and in heat too.
stars give off heat and or sum othewr stuff
We have stars because the main star is the sun and there is other stars in space that are luminous globes of heat.
Three processes produce heat. Contraction, in both stars and planets; radioactive decay, in planets, and nuclear fusion, in stars.
Solar heat is produced by stars. The people who live on Earth get their solar heat from the sun.
The fusion occurring in the stars cause large amount of light, heat, and radiation causing the stars luminosity.