The mass of a red dwarf can go down to about 0.075 times the mass of the Sun. Anything smaller than that would be a brown dwarf, which is no longer considered a star.
which one start with smallest to the biggest
Much, MUCH smaller than the smallest star.
A star is MUCH larger than a moon.
Betelgeuse is much bigger than the Sun.
A star is much bigger than earth.
Much bigger. Earth is a relatively small planet, much smaller than even a dwarf star. A supernova is a very large star exploding.
Jupiter. However, it would need to be MUCH bigger. It would need about 80 times its present mass to become even the smallest possible red dwarf star. Even if you count "brown dwarfs", Jupiter would still need more than ten times its present mass just to be the smallest brown dwarf.
ARE* the stars bigger than mars? To answer your question: Yes, much bigger. Since the Sun in our solar system is in itself a star and is much bigger than Mars, you can assume that all stars are bigger Mars. P.S. The Sun is considered a relatively small star compared to others in our Galaxy.
Stars are much bigger than planets. The only stars that are smaller than planets are neutron stars.
The sun is a star, some stars are larger and other are smaller.
Supernova
Generally, they are not much bigger than the Earth.