("your" sun... do you have a different one?)
Anyway assuming we're talking about THE sun, relative to other stars, it is generally thought to be medium to medium-large.
No, not even close. In terms of mass, the Sun is about 332,946 times as massive. In terms of volume, the Sun is about 1,300,000 times larger. In terms of diameter, the Sun is about 109 times as wide.
venus (in terms of distance from the sun). In terms of distance from the earth, it is Mars In terms of size, it is Saturn.
dwarf star
No. The sun is actually in the top 5% of stars in terms of size.
Yes, the sun is an average-sized star in terms of its size, temperature, and luminosity compared to other stars in the universe.
almost perfect to average
No. In terms of diameter Sirius is 1.7 times the size of the sun.
The size of a "sun" is compared to that of Earth's Sun which is one solar mass. One does not describe a "sun" in terms of height.
Lacaille 9352 is a red dwarf star located approximately 10.74 light-years away from Earth in the constellation Pyxis. It has an apparent magnitude of about 7.3 and is classified as a spectral type M0. In terms of size, it has about 0.12 times the mass of the Sun and a radius roughly 0.15 times that of the Sun, making it significantly smaller and cooler than our star.
No, dwarf stars are smaller in size and mass compared to our Sun. They are classified by their lower luminosity and surface temperature.
Mercury is the planet closest to the Sun in terms of size. It is the smallest planet in our solar system, with a diameter of about 4,880 kilometers (3,032 miles).
Sun mass = 1.989 * 1030 kilograms. > Approximately 333,000 times the mass of earth.