Stars and suns, collectively, are the same things. The Sun looks brighter just because it is a lot closer, but really it is only a very average star.
No. Stars are much larger than planets or moons. Stars are suns, some larger and brighter than our own.
The sun appears bigger and brighter than other stars because it is much closer to Earth compared to the distant stars. Stars are actually suns, but they look tiny and faint because of their immense distance from us.
No. Stars are suns. Some of them are brighter than out own sun. However, they are so incredibly far away that they only appear as points of light.
Take any famous star, and read about it - most of them are bigger than our Sun. That doesn't mean our Suns is exceptionally small, quite the contrary; however, the brighter stars can be seen from far away.Take any famous star, and read about it - most of them are bigger than our Sun. That doesn't mean our Suns is exceptionally small, quite the contrary; however, the brighter stars can be seen from far away.Take any famous star, and read about it - most of them are bigger than our Sun. That doesn't mean our Suns is exceptionally small, quite the contrary; however, the brighter stars can be seen from far away.Take any famous star, and read about it - most of them are bigger than our Sun. That doesn't mean our Suns is exceptionally small, quite the contrary; however, the brighter stars can be seen from far away.
Nuclear fusion is at the heart of the suns activities. That generates every thing happening on Sol and the other stars.
Yes, much bigger. The stars appear tiny because they are unimaginably far away. The stars we see at night are suns, some bigger and brighter than out son, some with their own planets orbiting them.
No, suns are stars.
No. Stars are suns.
Death or time have both been called the shatterer of the world.From Robert Jungk's Brighter than a Thousand Suns; I am become Death, the shatterer of Worlds.
because the suns ray reflect off of it
because the suns ray reflect off of it
No. Stars cannot fall to Earth They are far beyond the influence of Earth's gravity and far larger and more massive than Earth. The stars are suns, some larger and brighter than our own but unimaginably far away. The remains of dead stars are composed of extremely dense forms of matter not found on Earth. The "falling stars" are not actually stars; they are meteors, small pieces of rock and metal that burn up as they travel through Earth's upper atmosphere at extreme speeds.