All the stars in the night sky are mighty suns! The Sun is our very own star! It is so big and bright because we are so close to it.
Now there are different star types. Here's a link if you want to get more detail: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_classification
A fun video that demonstrates how planets and stars differ in size: www.YouTube.com/watch?v=HEheh1BH34Q
They are not. The Sun is a very close star.
the sun and the stars are the same the only difference is that the stars are farther away and the sun is closer
Stars appear different from the sun because the sun is closer to the earth and the other stars are further away from the earth so that's why the appear differently when you look at them in the sky!!!!!
The main difference between the sun and other stars is that the sun is much closer to us.
The main difference between the sun and other stars is that the sun is much closer to us.
The Sun is a very average star, not really different from a lot of others.
If our sun did not exist the other stars would be little different from the way they are. The sun is just one of billions of stars in the galaxy. Many of the stars we see in the sky are larger than our own sun.
sun doesn't preform binary systems.binary systems: are when one or more stars rotates around the sun. which our most common stars have done, except the sun.
The sun is a star. Its different to us than other stars because it is the closest to our planet.
It is not different, just closer to the Earth.
It isn't different. The sun is hotter and brighter than the average main sequence stars, but it is within what is considered normal. There is nothing extraordinary about the sun itself.
Its not... the main thing it does is suppord life which other stars can possibly do, too.
No, but the fact that the Earth orbits the Sun does do that. Because of the way sunlight ins scattered through our atmosphere (and because the Sun is incredibly bright), we cannot see stars that appear near the Sun in the sky; the Sun has to go below the horizon for any stars to be visible. Stars that are near the Sun in the sky are not visible. So as the Earth goes around the Sun, a different set of stars appear to be "behind" the Sun, near it in the sky, each season.