no,planet has a star day and night
In very basic terms, both night and day are caused by the proximity of a planet-like object to a star. Night turns into day as the earth is rotates.
all day and all night
Betelgeuse is a star, not a planet, so it does not have a day. We have a day and night because at times we are facing or not facing our star, the Sun. Planets have days and nights as they rotate, but stars do not.
I think they all do in this solar system, but maybe someplace with two suns has a planet without night. On a binary star system when the planet move between the stars in part of it's year there will be no night or only daylight.
The Earth's rotation on its axis causes day and night. As the Earth rotates, different parts of the planet are exposed to sunlight, causing day and darkness causing night.
During its rotation around its own axis half of the planet faces the sun [day] and half faces away from the sun [night] As the planet continues to turn so night slowly turns into day and then day into night and so on.
No the "planet" sun is in the other side of the world when its night. and its a star not a planet. --------------------------------- The son is not even a polanit. --------------------------------- HAHAHHAHAHA
It depends on how far away the planet is from a star. If it's close, it's hot. Also, if the planet rotates on its axis there would be a big day-night temperature difference.
It doesn't. Day and night are planetary phenomena caused by the rotation of the planet.
Rigel is a star, not a planet, so it does not have a day.
around 20 degrees Celsius on a good day id say
the same thing that causes day and night on every other planet - it rotates.