energy released during the process of nuclear fusion in the star's core
A parent star is a star that produces a planet's heat and light.
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The star that produces the most light is the Sun. It is classified as a main-sequence star, and its luminosity is about 3.8 x 10^26 watts.
Yes.... The sun is a star, so it produces its own light by nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium.
Only the star. Asteroids, planets and moons just reflect light from the Sun.
Because of nuclear fusion! The nuclear fusion releases energy which produces light.
The amount of light a star produces can give insights into its temperature, size, and relative luminosity compared to other stars. It can also help astronomers determine the star's distance from Earth and its age.
No. A star is an object in space that produces heat and light through nuclear fusion. Stars are not living things.
No. Every star you see produces its own light, just as the sun does. Which isn't surprising when you recall that the sun is a star.
The heat and the light in stars is the same thermal nuclear fission that our Sun (a star) produces.
Cause by the friction between particle and the air, which produces heat.
A shining star is much bigger than a planet. A star produces light and heat and other types of radiation of it's own. A planet does not.