Back in the 1990's, we began to be able to "see" planets about other stars. The nearest stars are so far away that the first evidence that a planet (or planets) orbited them were small observable "shifts" or a "wobble" in the movement of the star (called perturbations). We have now actually been able to see a planet silhouetted against a star! Well over 200 exoplanets (planets outside our solar system) have been catalogued so far, and more are on the way. But does every star have its own solar system? Probably not all of them. But planetary evolutionists believe that because of the way a "solar system" collects mass and "forms itself" to give itself shape under the hand of gravity, there are going to be many stars that do have their own solar systems (planetary bodies) orbiting about them. We'll still have to wait a bit for more data to get some idea of "what the odds are" for a given star having planets about it, but we're working on it! We live in exciting times, do we not?! Click on a link and warp on over for more information.
Not every star in this universe has planets. As some reasons is that binary stars can't have planets orbiting around it. It's can be possible that some binary stars can have planets if those planets are very far away from it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star
Stars for example OUR SUN create light through massive energetic processes. In short they create their own light. Your question is actually quite vague your best bet is to read the reference above on Stars.
No. There's only one star in our solar system. It's the one we call the 'sun'. The next
nearest star to us is about 278,000 times farther away from us than the sun is. None
of the other stars knows or cares that our solar system exists.
No, a galaxy is a group of densely-packed stars.
There's only one star that's a part of our solar system . . . the one we call "the sun".
None of the other stars is anywhere near our solar system.
sun is the name of a star. that doesn't mean that every star is a sun
Yes. Indeed, many stars are part of a multiple star system. But we aren't sure yet if multi-star systems have any stable planets, or if they might be habitable.
We can be absolutely certain that at least some solar systems don't have black holes,
because our own doesn't have one.
After our own Sun, the closest star is called Proxima Centauri.
yes every sun does have planets because there is only one sun.if you meant stars no not all stars have planetsNot true, every star you see is actually a sun just like our own. Our sun just so happens to be the only star in our solar system and therefore the closest star to us.Does every star have its own solar system?Back in the 1990's, we began to be able to "see" planets about other stars. The nearest stars are so far away that the first evidence that a planet (or planets) orbited them were small observable "shifts" or a "wobble" in the movement of the star (called perturbations). We have now actually been able to see a planet silhouetted against a star! Well over 200 exoplanets (planets outside our solar system) have been catalogued so far, and more are on the way.But does every star have its own solar system? Probably not all of them. But planetary evolutionists believe that because of the way a "solar system" collects mass and "forms itself" to give itself shape under the hand of gravity, there are going to be many stars that do have their own solar systems (planetary bodies) orbiting about them. We'll still have to wait a bit for more data to get some idea of "what the odds are" for a given star having planets about it, but we're working on it! We live in exciting times, do we not?!
There is only one star in the solar system that is the sun. So to answer your question the sun is. The sun is a main sequence star also. The hottest stars are blue/white ones followed by stars like our own than the coolest stars are red ones
The Sun. Although it's highly probable that every solar system has its own asteroids, orbiting their own stars.
A solar radii is used to express the comparison from one star to our own Sun. If a star has a radius of 10.3 solar radii, then it has a radius 10.3 times larger than the Sun
No one knows for sure. No one has a telescope powerful enough to see every star in the universe
The sun is the only star in the solar system. Stars are extremely conspicuous, and if there was another star in our own solar system, we would notice it.
First of all, Jupiter is not a star. It would have to be if it and all its satellites were to be a solar system. Secondly, it itself orbits a star, our sun, so it is in a solar system.
Not part of our Solar system - but it is believed to be orbiting a star similar to our own.
We strongly suspect that every other solar system will be different, probably RADICALLY different, from our own. Every star is a little different; the mass that coalesced to form the solar system is different, and the unimaginably random factors that caused each solar system to form as it did - those are also different.
part of, but not its own
After our own Sun, the closest star is called Proxima Centauri.
yes every sun does have planets because there is only one sun.if you meant stars no not all stars have planetsNot true, every star you see is actually a sun just like our own. Our sun just so happens to be the only star in our solar system and therefore the closest star to us.Does every star have its own solar system?Back in the 1990's, we began to be able to "see" planets about other stars. The nearest stars are so far away that the first evidence that a planet (or planets) orbited them were small observable "shifts" or a "wobble" in the movement of the star (called perturbations). We have now actually been able to see a planet silhouetted against a star! Well over 200 exoplanets (planets outside our solar system) have been catalogued so far, and more are on the way.But does every star have its own solar system? Probably not all of them. But planetary evolutionists believe that because of the way a "solar system" collects mass and "forms itself" to give itself shape under the hand of gravity, there are going to be many stars that do have their own solar systems (planetary bodies) orbiting about them. We'll still have to wait a bit for more data to get some idea of "what the odds are" for a given star having planets about it, but we're working on it! We live in exciting times, do we not?!
No, none of them do. Planets revolve around stars, so all of the planets in our solar system orbit the Sun, our own star.
Which Sun? The star Sol, in our own solar system, is in one of the spirals.
The Sun's own magnetic field - the star is the largest and most active component of the system.
No, the "Milky Way" is the name of our galaxy. Our sun is but a single, solitary star among some two hundred billion or more stars, many of which have their own planets. At last count we know of roughly 300 solar systems besides our own. Our solar system is called simply "Solar system," as our beloved star is called "Sol."