No. The sun is part of the solar system, so it cannot be bigger than it. The mass of the sun is much larger than the mass of the rest of the objects in the solar system put together, which may be what you are referring to.
Our sun is not bigger than the solar system. The sun is a star, and it contains over 99.9% of the mass of the solar system, but the solar system is much bigger than the sun.
Although Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar System, it is much much smaller than the Sun
No. Planets look smaller than the sun because they actually are smaller.
yes the sun is hotter than anything in the solar system
The solar system includes the sun and all things orbiting it, so naturally the solar system is bigger than the sun.
Dwarf planet such as Pluto
solar system
Jupiter is 10 times smaller than the Sun and it is 1/1000 the mass of the sun.
The dwarf planet, Pluto, is bigger than an asteroid, smaller than Mercury, and farther from the sun than Neptune. It used to be the smallest and furthest planet in our solar system.
The sun, by far, has more mass than anything else in the solar system. The sun contains 99.86% of the mass in the solar system.
No, the Kuiper Belt is larger than the solar system. The Kuiper Belt is a region in the outer solar system that stretches from Neptune's orbit to about 50 astronomical units from the Sun. The solar system itself extends much farther, encompassing the Sun, planets, and all of their respective orbits.
Jupiter's diameter is about 10 times smaller than the Sun's diameter. The mass of the Sun is about 1,000 times greater than Jupiter's mass. Jupiter is the largest planet in our solar system, but it is much smaller than the Sun.