Yes. Stars are enormous balls of hydrogen and helium that carry out nuclear fusion in their cores. They are extremely hot and so shine brightly. They appear as tiny points of light only because they are so distant.
Billions of them are too far away to be seen.
Some are below our Horizon, some are hidden behind galaxies. Many are hidden by the brightness of the Galactic core of the Milky Way.
But as it is night - it is our Sun.
A Black Dwarf star or a Neutron star. A star could end up as a Black Hole too, but that's not a star.
Edit: I didn't say a black dwarf because the universe is nowhere old enough for a black dwarf to have formed. You are absolutely correct that a black star would emit no light, at least visible light. It may glow in infrared for a very lng time!
All stars that shine shine also at night. The Sun is never visible at night (that's why it is called night).
The stars that do not emit light are th black holes.
This probably refers to Polaris. The sky will seem to rotate around the pole star above the north pole.
All stars shine
Polaris, the north star
the north star
a star has a substance in side called plasma.
Since the sun (a star) is so bright, no other star can shine during the daytime.
About 10,000,000K.
No planets reflect light from their host star (sun)
The Bible only implies that it did - it doesn't state it categorically.
a star has a substance in side called plasma.
the sun makes it shine
Shine Like a Star - 2010 is rated/received certificates of: Ukraine:(Banned) (cinema release)
There is no purpose of a star's brightness. They just exist and shine.
Bethleham
Your star will shine, (of the album second coming) is in simple 4/4 time, and the tempo is roughly 110bpm.
It shines as brightly because of the distance it has from earth and it has to do with how old the star is.
you can get 64 shine sprites and 64 star coins.
A star in essence is a big ball of fire. When it stops shining it has 'burned out'.
Star Media Institute's motto is '"Let Your light Shine"'.
A shine sprite
figure it out