200 billion
300,million stars surround Mercury! That's a strange question. Obviously there are no stars anywhere near Mercury except for the Sun. However, I suppose you could say the entire Universe surrounds Mercury, in a way.
The 'light of day' in Antarctica can come from the sun, the moon, and the southern hemisphere of stars that surround planet earth.
The sun is larger than some of the other stars. There are many stars that are larger than the sun.
Yes. The sun is one of many stars, and there are even larger stars than the sun. Our sun is just an average star.
The sun is a star. A star is a sun.
Maybe from all stars, thousands of stars, in the galaxy.
The sun is a star. For mass and size: Stars come in various sizes in masses and you will find smaller and bigger stars than our sun.
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.
Our Sun is a star. As stars go, is a "lower end of middle" kind of star. Astronomers describe it as being about as ordinary as stars get. There are many stars that are spectacularlybigger than our Sun, and many - some much bigger - that are quite a bit hotter than our sun. Stars like our sun, however, have one advantage: They are long-lived. The normal life of our sun is estimated to be about 10 billion years, which it is about halfway through at the moment.
Stars came first before the sun. Stars formed billions of years before the sun did as part of the process of galaxy formation. The sun is a relatively young star compared to many others in the universe.
Many stars are larger than our Sun, many are smaller.
It depends what star your looking at,