No.
Planets, planetesimals, moons, comets, asteroids, and space dust all orbit the Sun and none produce any light.
Dust in the Sun was created in 1958.
The brightness of a comet is not determined by its distance from the sun, but rather by factors such as the size of its nucleus, how recently it has passed close to the sun, and how much dust and gas it is releasing. Therefore, the brightest comets can be found at various distances from the sun.
That's not a term commonly used in astronomy. There is dust in the Solar System, and it is likely that part of the material of such dust came from the Sun.
If the earth's atmosphere was filled with dust that blocked the sun's rays, a sudden climate change would occur all over the planet from its temperature to freezing and that climate change would effect biodiversity. Also, the sun would not be able to produce day and night.
Fans generally don't produce dust, but they do stir it up quite a bit, which is why it collects on the fan.
No. A dust devil is a whirlwind that forms from localized convection caused by heating from the sun. As such, they form under sunny conditions. Tornadoes develop from severe thunderstorms. Dust devils can, on rare occasions, produce minor damage similar to that of a very weak tornado.
The dust that remained after the sun formed coalesced to form planets, asteroids, and comets.
all the dust particles mixed and the sun was formed
An object composed of dust, ice, and rock which orbits the Sun is called a comet.
The sun creates dust through a process called "sputtering," where high-energy particles from the sun's solar wind collide with and break apart larger particles like rocks and asteroids in space, creating smaller dust particles.
The sun produce light and nuclear energy