They are all suns for far off Galaxy's.
Very small. Only about 7.6% of all visible stars.
A collective noun for a group of stars is a cluster of stars (small group) and a galaxy of stars (large group).
Some stars are bigger than the planet like the sun but some are small. The size varies.
They are either small and cool and fusing hydrogen or large and hot, fusing helium. The large and hot ones ape read because although they are hot, this heat is radiated over a large surface area. Large red stars are approaching the end of their lives, small, cool red stars will have very, very long lives.
There are 5 stars on the flag, one large gold star is arounded by 4 smaller stars. The large one represents the Communist Party of China, while the four small star represents the classes of the country.There are 5 stars. One big star and 4 smaller stars to the right of it.
A large yellow star ringed with small yellow stars.
A white dwarf is very small as stars go; comparable in size to a small planet such as Earth.
We tend to see the large planets farthest away from their stars. So it is unlikely we will find any small planets close to their star similar to Mercury.
Our sun is a typical star compared to others in the universe. It is a G-type main-sequence star, similar in size, age, and composition to many other stars. It is not particularly large or small, hot or cool, bright or dim in comparison to the billions of stars in the galaxy.
A white dwarf is very small as stars go; comparable in size to a small planet such as Earth.
Type II supernova. Formation of a neutron star or black hole.
The Sun isn't especially large, but is still a little larger than average. But the "average" for stars is skewed a bit by the fact that there are so many small stars. We talk about Betelgeuse and Rigel and Sirius, the biggest and brightest stars, but there are far more dwarf stars than giants.