Reflectors: Comets, asteroids, planets
Emitters: The sun, meteors, stars
The sun is a star.
planets moons asteroids meteorites meteors
No. Asteroids are just made of rock and metal. They do not glow.
Planets Reflect light, they do not contain any light apart from internal heat sources.
They don't glow. They reflect the light from the sun.
As most objects do NOT produce their own light, we see them when they reflects light from other sources. The light that reflected from non-luminous objects comes from a light source like Sun or lamp.
planets moons asteroids meteorites meteors
Planets, moons, asteroids, artificial satellites.
Objects such as planets, moons and asteroids, and manmade objects like satellites.
sun, stars, galaxies, nebulae, and meteors
Only the star. Asteroids, planets and moons just reflect light from the Sun.
yes
No. Asteroids are just made of rock and metal. They do not glow.
Planets reflect light.
Planets Reflect light, they do not contain any light apart from internal heat sources.
No, but they can reflect light.
There are most likely trilliions of bodies in space that do not emit light. They include . . . -- the planets Mercury and Venus -- the planets Earth and Mars, and their three satellites -- the millions of asteroids -- the comets -- the planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, and their roughly 110 satellites -- the former planet Pluto and its two satellites -- the millions of cold bodies in the Kuyper belt and Oort cloud -- all of the similar bodies gravitationally bound to and in orbits around all of the other stars. And don't forget the black holes.
They don't. It's the planets and moons that reflect the light of stars.