No. A star is the same as our sun. An asteroid is a large peice of rock flying through space; it can be a small body, or a large body as big as several kilometers across. Asteroids are frequently found to be in orbit around a larger body such as a moon or planet.
No.
No. A shooting star, scientifically called a meteor, is an object from space that is passing through the atmosphere, heating the air until it glows brightly.
If there is an atmosphere, the light will gradually dim as the asteroid approaches the asteroid.
No, it is a star.
No, Sirius is not an asteroid. Sirius is a binary star system consisting of the brighter star, Sirius A, and its companion, Sirius B, which is a white dwarf star. It is the brightest star in the Earth's night sky.
The asteroid '2309 Mr. Spock' was actually named after the astronomer's cat who was named after the Star Trek character . The asteroid's discoverer's name is James B. Gibson .
No. An asteroid can get captured by an asteroid and become a moon, but not the moon. Our moon is too large to be considered an asteroid.
Asteroids (star-like) are rocky.
A solar system is a star and all the objects that orbit it. An asteroid is an object of rock and/or metal that orbits a star and is too small to be a planet.
universe, molecular cloud, galaxy, star, planet, asteroid,atom
Star Blazers - 1979 The Asteroid Ring 1-9 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
No. Asteroids are too small to be considered planets.