It's a yes and no. There are similarities like the WarpStone or the Dinosaur Tribes. It was going to be for the Nintendo 64 but it was canceled and remade for the Nintendo GameCube and was called Star Fox Adventures were the story and stages were changed big time. Krystal was originally a cat, but when changed to a Star Fox game, Krystal was a fox. Sabre was a lion who was changed to Fox McCloud.
They are the same thing, which is the planet Venus.
Planets and stars are not the same. Venus is the closest planet, on average. The sun is the closest star.
They are not the same. One, the Sun is a star, and the other, the Earth is a rocky planet.
Because it orbits the same star as we do (the Sun).
I have no clue and I am wandering the same thing
Every planet in our solar system orbits the same star, which is the Sun. Therefore, each planet has one star. In other solar systems, planets can orbit different stars, but each individual planet still orbits just one star at a time.
geinosisNo, there are no two planets the same in Star Wars and Star Trek. Geonosis was in Star Wars, Genesis was in Star Trek, and it wasn't even the planets real name.
Someone answered Mars. Mars is NOT a star, it is a planet.
Pythagoras is credited with noticing that the morning star and the evening star were one and the same. He understood that both objects were actually the planet Venus appearing at different times during the day.
Greek mathematician and astronomer Pythagoras was the one who noticed that the morning star and evening star were the same planet, Venus. This observation challenged the prevailing belief that they were two separate celestial bodies.
Only under once circumstance: a binary planet. In the case of a binary planet, two planets will revolve about their common center of mass and travel around their star together. The configuration is much like that of a planet with a large moon.
No, usually the star orbits more slowly due to its greater mass. The planet's orbit is affected by the star's gravity, causing the star to wobble slightly around the common center of mass. This wobble is used to detect exoplanets through the radial velocity method.