sometimes other planets can look like stars, but a star in itself is just a star. No. Stars are things like our Sun. While you may occasionally see some very close planets in the sky, most of the lights you see will not be planets.
the answer corret is : Extrasolar Planet by : Arisleydi Soca :)
a planet has it's own weak gravity that pulls the star it's orbiting as it orbits, as the star gets pulled around by the planet, scientist on Earth see the star wobbling, and then they know there is a planet!
The evening star is another name for the planet Venus. Venus is often visible in the evening sky and is one of the brightest objects in the night sky, earning it the nickname "evening star."
The twin star theory is that there may be another star similar to the star we call "the sun" that could possibly make life on another planet possible.
The first extra-solar planet (in other words, circling a star and not our sun) was discovered in 1995.
An example of a planet that orbits another star is Proxima Centauri b, which orbits the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri. It is located in the habitable zone of its star, making it a prime candidate for potentially hosting liquid water and potentially life.
you have to complete a task to get another task.
Since planets typically orbit their stars in elipses, there is a point in which it is closest, and another point in which it is farthest, from the star. The planet perihelion is when the planet is closest to the star it is orbiting. That is the most basic explanation. =)
Yes, it is one ball of gas. It's not a planet. It's a star. There is another star somewhere that is 10,000 times bigger than the sun.
a) Earth is not a star, but a planet. b) Earth is not part of "another galaxy", but of our own galaxy.
You can, in your imagination go to the moon, another planet, a star, or adopt an alien. In reality only a handful of people have been to the moon and no one is going back any time soon. No one has bee to another planet or a star, and we have no evidence that aliens exist, let alone are willing to be adopted.
It is highly unlikely for planets to form on another planet. Planets typically form from material surrounding a star, not from existing planets. However, moons can form around planets through processes such as accretion or capture.