They don't - new born stars and planets are formed together.
Yes, planets form around stars. In order to be a planet, one of the requirements is that you have to orbit around a sun. Also, as far as physicists can tell, planets form in the dust of other stars that have already died and left their matter.
No. Planets are formed after stars are and in most cases planets are consumed by the same star. Some stars can exist long after they have exhausted their supply of hydrogen and heavier element as red giants. Some even may last over 100 of trillions of years.
Planets orbit stars.
Stars, Planets, nebulae, galaxies.
Gases and rocks that form together to form a bigger shape or size
None Stars are gas Planets are solid
planets
Yes, planets form around stars. In order to be a planet, one of the requirements is that you have to orbit around a sun. Also, as far as physicists can tell, planets form in the dust of other stars that have already died and left their matter.
No. The stars are too hot for molecules to form. That said, some of those stars have planets and some of those planets may have water.
Stars' are forming and dying all the time, as we speak.
No. Planets are formed after stars are and in most cases planets are consumed by the same star. Some stars can exist long after they have exhausted their supply of hydrogen and heavier element as red giants. Some even may last over 100 of trillions of years.
Nebulae are the birth places for stars, not planets. However, once stars begin to form, planets can come about through gravitational 'clumping' in the stellar accretion disc.
Planets orbit stars.
Stars, Planets, nebulae, galaxies.
Gases and rocks that form together to form a bigger shape or size
after a star explodes, the star dust coalesces to form more stars, planets, and satellites
On the contrary! A star has planets, which circulate it. And planets have moons. Stars do not circle planets.