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From Jupiter's orbit, the stars would appear exactly as they do from Earth, with one exception: the Sun, which would be smaller. From below the clouds on Jupiter, you wouldn't be able to see any stars.
If the binary stars were of too high luminosity it would be impossible to distinguish the two through vision alone. Therefore most visual binary stars are of low luminosity.
To illustrate
The stars that you would see at night in 6 months time.
I am pretty sure the table you consulted lists only the extremes - but of course you can have thousands or even millions of "near" stars and "bright" stars, depending on how far down the list you go. Note that any list of the first thousand (for example) nearest stars would probably be incomplete, since there are many dim stars (red dwarves) that are very hard to detect.
That's an opinion, but if you meant temperature-wise, the answer would be smaller stars because of the gas and pressure.
The larger more formed star would absorb the smaller star, I'm pretty sure having two stars that close is impossible.
there are so many that it would be impossible to find the total amount of stars because all stars die and become reborn
There are so many stars out there that have been given names or numbers, that it would be impossible to put a full list of them here.
From Jupiter's orbit, the stars would appear exactly as they do from Earth, with one exception: the Sun, which would be smaller. From below the clouds on Jupiter, you wouldn't be able to see any stars.
It's not, the stars are bigger but the are farther away so they look smaller. Note, there are collapsed stars of degenerate matter known as neutron stars that would be substantially smaller than our moon (maybe a quarter mile across), but have a mass closer to that of our sun. These are a special case of star. White dwarf stars would also be fairly small, though not nearly as small as our moon. Closer to the size of earth.
If the binary stars were of too high luminosity it would be impossible to distinguish the two through vision alone. Therefore most visual binary stars are of low luminosity.
Our Sun is just an average star. There are smaller stars, and bigger stars, Some stars are so huge it would be difficult to see the Sun next to it - See link for a picture.
It is quite possible that some stars will have Neopets accounts, but as I doubt they would use their names as their account username, it would be almost impossible to find out. This sort of information remains anonymous to the Neopets staff as well, as was mentioned in one of their past editorials.
It would illustrate that reality is subjective.
They appear smaller as they are so far away. If you had a model of the solar system in your room, with all the planets and the sun at the centre, the next nearest stars on that model would have to be placed many miles away to be on the same scale.
That would be its size. Bigger stars live shorter lives because they use up energy faster, while smaller stars live longer because they don't use up as much energy.