Our sun is a rather ordinary star; there are countless stars in the Milky Way and other galaxies that are much larger. If you consider galaxies as 'objects', and it is not uncommon to do so, then any galaxy or star cluster would dwarf the sun.
Their are some other stars bigger than the sun
The Sun is approximately 109 times bigger than Earth, our planet.
In our solar system, the known objects larger than the moon are the sun, all eight planets, and the moons Ganymede, Titan, Callisto, and Io.
some stars are smaller than sun remaining stars are bigger than sun.
Betelgeuse is much bigger than the Sun.
The simple answer is that; it is closer. Thanks to forced perspective, smaller objects that are closer may look as big or even bigger than bigger objects that are farther away.
No, the Earth is not bigger than the Sun. The Sun is 109x bigger than the Earth.
The Sun is a star, it is Much Bigger than the Earth. It's probably thousands of times bigger than the Earth. Planets orbit around the Sun. One of those solar flares that leap out from the Sun like a flame from a fire is much bigger than the Earth.
The sun is 1,000,000,000,000 times bigger than the earth.
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.
Their are some other stars bigger than the sun
The sun is bigger than all the planets in the solar system.
The Sun is approximately 109 times bigger than Earth, our planet.
About a quarter of all stars are bigger than the sun, some of them a lot bigger.
If you meant "Is Jupiter bigger than the SUN" then no. The sun is bigger than any planets in our known solar system.
The sun is really not bigger than all the stars though it is bigger than alot of stars
why do objects get bigger when you multiply/scale by a number greater than 1