yes. The sun is quite a small star. It is just because it is so close to the Earth it looks enormous. Many stars are bigger than the Sun, I don't know about Planets, though.
We have not yet discovered any planet that is 1 million times bigger than the earth. The sun is approximately 1 million times larger than Earth by volume, but it is a star far larger than any planet.
Stars are much bigger than planets. The only stars that are smaller than planets are neutron stars.
There are no planets bigger than the sun. Even the largest planet Jupiter is only about 1% the size of the sun.
No planet could ever come close to the size of Betelgeuse.
Because our planet is much closer to the sun than any other star.
Although we don't know for certain, but it it highly likely that the Sun will be bigger than any planet. It is certainly bigger than all of the planets in our Solar System.
None. The sun is much larger than any planet.
that question doesn't make sense. there are star that are one billion times bigger than our on solar system star, how ever bigger stars live a shorter life than smaller stars!
If you mean "star", they are USUALLY bigger than planets. However, a "dead" star (one that ran out of fuel for nuclear fusion) is actually smaller. Those are called white dwarves, neutron stars, and black holes.
A planet orbiting a star other than the Sun.An exoplanet is a planet orbiting any other star out there, except the Sun.
No. To start off, the sun is a star, not a planet and is far larger than any planet. The sun is larger than the average star, but it is nowhere near being the largest.
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.