No. The Sun is much bigger than any planet.
If any planet were as big as our Sun (or bigger), it would have enough mass in it to start its own fusion reaction and become a star.
There are no known planets larger than our Sun. But there are planets larger than Jupiter that orbit other stars, and a number of stars vastly larger than our Sun, some nearly as large as our entire solar system!
In our Solar System, Jupiter is the largest planet - having more mass than all of the other planets combined.
Outside our Solar System XO-3b is the largest known extrasolar planet with a mass of about 1.92 times that of Jupiter.
See related question.
Sure there is. The sun is a only moderately sized as stars go. There are many stars in the Milkey Way that dwarf the sun. Use the link below to see a short video on some relative sizes of stars starting with the planets of the solar system.
From current understanding, it is not possible for a planet, rocky or gassy to grow anywhere near as large as our Sun.
The largest planet found so far is only twice as large as Jupiter. A long way to go before it gets anywhere as large as the Sun.
However, the Universe is big, and all manner of strange things have been discovered.
Planets are all smaller than the Sun. Even if you added all the planets together, it would be about 1% of the Sun.
No there is currently no planet larger than the ☀️
Yes there is. There are other stars way bigger than the sun.
No. The sun is a star much larger than any planet.
No, asteroids are smaller than planets, and planets are smaller than the sun.
No. And there won't be. It's not actually possible.
There are no planets bigger than the sun. Even the largest planet Jupiter is only about 1% the size of the sun.
The Sun is approximately 109 times bigger than Earth, our planet.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar system, but it is not larger than the Sun. The Sun is about 10 times larger than Jupiter.
No, a dwarf planet is smaller than a planet but bigger than an asteroid, and dwarf planets tend to be a long way out, like Pluto and Eris.
If we were going to compare any planet to the sun, it would be the gas giant Jupiter. The sun is a couple of hundred times bigger than Jupiter, but the king of the planets is the one that is more similar to the sun than any of the other planets.
There are no planets bigger than the sun. Even the largest planet Jupiter is only about 1% the size of the sun.
Mars. Not Mars. Jupiter is a lot bigger than Earth, but the Sun is much bigger than a planet.
No, the Earth is not bigger than the Sun. The Sun is 109x bigger than the Earth.
None. The sun is much larger than any planet.
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.
The Sun is approximately 109 times bigger than Earth, our planet.
Since the Sun is much bigger than all the planets, the biggest planet is closest in size to 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.
Mercury is much, much smaller than the Sun. The Sun is larger than all the planets combined.
Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar system, but it is not larger than the Sun. The Sun is about 10 times larger than Jupiter.
The Dwarf Planet Pluto.
Pluto was redesignated as a dwarf planet. All the stars we can see are much bigger than the planets and many of them are bigger than the Sun.