Stars do not originate they are the after affects of blow up astroids which are called super novas and when these happen they produce more stars.
After the Big Bang all of the left over debree started to float around in space and eventually came together by their own gravity and when it got hot enough and dense enough it solidified.
science says from a big boom, they just don't know how it got there, possibly from a higher power
From exploded stars and planets, and from impact debris.
Planets do not technically need their respective stars, but stars keep planets in orbit and provide heat and light to the planets.
On the contrary! A star has planets, which circulate it. And planets have moons. Stars do not circle planets.
Moons orbit planets. Planets orbit stars. Some stars orbit other stars, or orbit their mutual center of gravity. Stars orbit the center of the galaxy. Galaxies may orbit the center of the "galactic group".
An Astronomer is a scientist who studies the stars and planets.
Nebulae are the birth places for stars, not planets. However, once stars begin to form, planets can come about through gravitational 'clumping' in the stellar accretion disc.
Planets orbit stars.
stars, the planets have to get heat from stars
From exploded stars and planets, and from impact debris.
Planets and stars do all eventually die.
Planets do not technically need their respective stars, but stars keep planets in orbit and provide heat and light to the planets.
No stars are flaming balls of various gasses and moons are planetismals that come from nearby planets
On the contrary! A star has planets, which circulate it. And planets have moons. Stars do not circle planets.
Planets and stars have gravity.
Yes, in the sense that both of their 'lights' come from a star.
No. Supernovas are cataclysmic eruptions from massive stars that have come to the end of their lives. See related questions
The Solar System Makes the planets and the Stars.