The sun is a star. It is larger than some stars but smaller than others. It only appears larger than other stars because it is much closer to us.
Between 10 to 100 times the radius
Stars are significantly larger than Earth. For example, the Sun's diameter is about 109 times that of Earth. Larger stars, such as Betelgeuse, can be hundreds or even thousands of times larger than the Sun.
The sun has a radius of approximately 696,340 kilometers, while a star with 0.1 solar radius would have a radius of 69,634 kilometers. To calculate how many times larger the sun is, we divide the sun's radius by the smaller star's radius: 696,340 km / 69,634 km = 10. Therefore, the sun is 10 times larger than a star with 0.1 solar radius.
The universe contains everything that exists, including every star. The universe is many times larger than any star.
No. The sun is larger than the average star, but nothing extraordinary. There are stars many times larger than the sun. The sun only appears bigger than any other star because it is much closer to us.
The Sun has a radius of about 1 solar radius. If a star has a size of 0.1 solar radius, this means the Sun is 10 times larger than that star. To find this, you simply divide the Sun's radius (1 solar radius) by the star's radius (0.1 solar radius). Thus, the Sun is 10 times larger in size compared to the star.
It depends on what star you compare it to. Stars have many different sizes. Our sun is a star and it is approximately a million times larger than the earth.
Many stars are larger than our Sun, many are smaller.
100 times larger than the sun
It is 10 times larger than a decimeter
Yes. Even the smallest star is many times larger than Earth. Earth is a bit more than 12,000 kilometers across. A red giant star is far larger with a diameter of 20 to 100 million kilometers (20,000,000 to 100,000,000).
The Sun is somewhat midrange in size. All Giant and Supergiant class stars are larger, some of which many times larger, than the Sun.