Beacause God made them that way.
Planets are a lot bigger than stars except the sun... the sun is a star. So to me the answer is a star is bigger and the stars are also smaller.Let's think about the actual sizes, not just how they appear in the sky.You may be thinking of the apparent sizes as seen from Earth. Stars like our Sun are a lot bigger than planets and there's lots of stars bigger than the Sun.However there are also stars a lot smaller than the Sun. So some stars aresmaller than some planets.For example "white dwarfs" have a lot more mass than the Earth, but they arenot much bigger.Let's be clear though, most stars are bigger than planets.
On the whole stars are much larger than planets, but there are some dwarf stars that are smaller than giant planets.
Most stars are bigger than any planet.
Stars are much bigger than planets. The only stars that are smaller than planets are neutron stars.
the difference is that stars are much bigger in size than a planet
Because the Sun is closer to the earth than all the other stars
the sun is the most closest to the planets then the other stars so the sun looks way bigger than all the stars
Yes, much bigger. The stars appear tiny because they are unimaginably far away. The stars we see at night are suns, some bigger and brighter than out son, some with their own planets orbiting them.
Well,planets do not have any light of their own so they are definitely not brighter and yes there may be some stars smaller than the planets but most of the stars are bigger than the planets . But on the whole the Space is not that much explored so that we can get any cumulative answer.
the gas planets are bigger than the rocky planets
Gas giants like Jupiter and stars like our Sun.
Earth is the biggest Terrestrial Planet of the SOLAR SYSTEM. Bigger ones are Gas Giants. Bigger than Gas Giants are Stars. Bigger than Stars are Black Holes. The LARGEST TERRESTRIAL PLANET is unknown. It says Largest of THE Terrestrial Planets. The Answer is changing because in seconds, a new planet is formed.