it depends on the color of the star
the hottest star is color blue
and the coldest star is color red
No, because at night the Sun is hidden. But the Sun's brightness prevents stars being seen in the daytime.
Yes, stars are hot like the sun. Stars are massive balls of glowing gas that emit light and heat through nuclear fusion reactions in their cores. The temperature of stars can vary depending on their size and age, but they are all extremely hot compared to other objects in space.
The sun is a G class star and (from space) its pale yellow.
Our Sun is a star. As stars go, is a "lower end of middle" kind of star. Astronomers describe it as being about as ordinary as stars get. There are many stars that are spectacularlybigger than our Sun, and many - some much bigger - that are quite a bit hotter than our sun. Stars like our sun, however, have one advantage: They are long-lived. The normal life of our sun is estimated to be about 10 billion years, which it is about halfway through at the moment.
The Sun is similar to other stars in that it is a massive ball of hot gas fueled by nuclear fusion, emitting light and heat. It also has a magnetic field, sunspots, and solar flares like other stars. Additionally, the Sun follows the same lifecycle stages as other stars, starting as a protostar, then becoming a main sequence star, and eventually ending its life as a white dwarf.
Yes. Stars are extremely hot. The sun is one of them. Some stars are even hotter and brighter than the sun.
No, it is quite hot.
The sun is not truly made of fire. It is made of plasma. Other stars are the same in this regard, though they vary in hot hot they are.
Yes The Sun is very hot. Its temperature is more than 50036 Degree Celsius
No, because at night the Sun is hidden. But the Sun's brightness prevents stars being seen in the daytime.
A planet is formed out of hot gases revolving around the Sun.
because stars are balls of hot burning gases like our sun
Yes! Stars are made out of many gases that are extremely hot. But a sun can also have black spots on its surface which are cold.
No. Even the "coolest" stars have surface temperatures of thousands of degrees. An orange star is not as hot as out sun, but is still quite hot.
Stars are enormous balls of extremely hot gas, which are similar to our sun, but much farther away.
While it is perfectly true that there are lots of stars which are as hot as the sun, or in some cases hotter than the sun, these stars are much farther away from us than the sun is, and we do not receive any significant amount of heat from them. Starlight does not make us warm, unlike sunlight.
Yes they are. Some are hotter than others.