Star
a star is way bigger than a planet. you need a telescope to see some of the planets.a star twinkles.a planet glows.
It would make the gravity of the star have more power.As for your question, it all depends.If the planet was bigger than the star, the star would be pulled in gravatationally(if that's even a word).If the star were bigger than the planet, the planet would be pulled in.
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.
Stars are much bigger than planets. The only stars that are smaller than planets are neutron stars.
It would all depend on the "system" in question.
Pluto was redesignated as a dwarf planet. All the stars we can see are much bigger than the planets and many of them are bigger than the Sun.
Yes, it is one ball of gas. It's not a planet. It's a star. There is another star somewhere that is 10,000 times bigger than the sun.
Much bigger. Earth is a relatively small planet, much smaller than even a dwarf star. A supernova is a very large star exploding.
Orion is a star. It is much bigger than the entire planet Earth, much less the northern hemisphere.
No planet could ever come close to the size of Betelgeuse.
There are no planets bigger than the sun. Even the largest planet Jupiter is only about 1% the size of the sun.
If Jupiter was a little bigger we might have had a second star in our Solar System instead of a 5th planet.