Well, yes, as long as you understand that "burning" doesn't mean combustion, but nuclear fusion. Actually only the core of the Sun is "burning"; all the rest of it is insulating us from its terrible heat, and doing a pretty good job of it, too.
The sun does not have an atmosphere - it is a star, not a planet. It is a ball of burning gas.
The Sun is a Giant ball of burning gases, but the sun is a star so I'm guessing what you are looking for is the Sun or a Star.
A star is a burning ball of gas out in space. Saturn is a planet with rings. Uranus is also a planet. The moon is a moon - a satellite that orbits a planet. The only burning ball of gas in that list is our sun. The sun's name is actually Sol.
because stars are balls of hot burning gases like our sun
a star is made up of burning gases which makes it a luminous body. the sun is the only star in the solar system. the brightest star except the sun is sirius
The moon is not a star. It is a large ball of rock that orbits Earth as a satellite. A star is a huge ball of burning gas. Our star is called The Sun.
a star is made up of burning gases which makes it a luminous body. the sun is the only star in the solar system. the brightest star except the sun is sirius
It is estimated that the sun formed into a star about 4.57 billion years ago.
That sounds like the description of a star. Please note that the "burning" does not refer to a chemical reaction, even though stars are "burning hot"; stars get their energy from nuclear fusion.
Yes, the sun is a burning star. It undergoes nuclear fusion in its core, where hydrogen atoms are converted into helium, releasing immense amounts of heat and light in the process. This continuous fusion reaction is what fuels the sun and allows it to emit energy.
The sun is burning gasses just like the stars. And just like any star, when the gas runs out, it will stop burning and disappear.
Yes, the sun is a star, and no, it does not burn in our atmosphere. The sun, which does "burn" but with nuclear fire, is our neighborhood star. Additionally, it's some 93 million miles from here. We don't want to be too close to Sol or we'd toast.