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A stellar nursery.
Most interstellar gas is at a lower temperature than that of stellar atmospheres and the density of interstellar gas is less than that of stellar atmospheres.
Not if they have the faintest clue what they're doing. Parallax is used to measure distance, not temperature.
Yes, they have roughly the same surface temperature. Internal temperatures may be very different depending on the respective stages of stellar evolution the stars are in.
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A star nursery is called a "stellar nursery" or a "stellar birthplace." These are regions in space where new stars are formed from collapsing clouds of gas and dust.
it is where a star is formed.
Wherever there is a stellar nursery.
A stellar nursery is usually called a molecular cloud. A nebula is a generic term for an interstellar cloud of dust, gas and plasma.
Molecular cloud or Stellar Nursery .
Dust cloud
Yes. It's where stars are "born" and start undergoing fusion on their own.
The term "stellar nursery" is sometimes used.
Pleiades is considered a stellar nursery because it is a dense region of stars and gas in our galaxy where stars are still being formed. Basically, Pleiades is a stellar-sized birthing place of stars.
The Pleiades is called a stellar nursery because it is a young open star cluster where new stars are being formed. The intense gravitational interactions among the stars in this cluster can trigger the birth of new stars from surrounding gas and dust clouds. This makes it a region where new stars are born, similar to how a nursery is a place where babies are born and cared for.
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We don't know. The Sun has been around for a long time, and has orbited the galactic core a number of times, while its orbit around the core has undergone many chaotic perturbations. Stars born from the same stellar nursery might be right around the corner, or they might be at the opposite side of the galaxy. Currently, we can't even tell which stellar nursery the Sun was born from, or whether it still exists.