No.
There are four "states" of matter; solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. Plasma is the state of extremely hot gasses in which the electrons have been stripped away from the atomic nuclei, causing the nuclei and electrons to exist in a kind of super-heated nuclear soup.
Stars are "plasma".
plasma
Plasma is the phase of matter that exists naturally only in stars. Plasma is an ionized gas where electrons are separated from atoms, resulting in a high-energy state typical of stars.
Plasma is a state of matter that is uncommon on Earth but is found in stars. Plasma is a superheated state where atoms are stripped of their electrons, resulting in a mixture of positively charged ions and free electrons. In stars, the high temperatures and pressures create conditions where plasma is the dominant state of matter.
Nope. It depends on how much matter the star was immersed in during its formation. More matter equals more size and vice versa.
Due to the scientific law that states that matter cannot be created nor destroyed, it is extremely likely that all of the stars in our universe were formed from older stars that had released some or all of their matter.
new stars can get matter from old stars and comets really anything it can get its hands on
The vast bulk of your mass was at one time part of a star, so if you matter, then stars matter.
yes
Stars form from the matter within nebula.
stars
Plasma.
PLASMA
the state of matter found in stars is plasma.
Plasma
Chevron Hall of Stars - 1956 A Matter of Nerve was released on: USA: 1956
Stars are super-heated, ionized gas. This state of matter is called plasma, and yes, it's matter because it's made of atoms. Atoms have mass and volume.
When stars die, the matter(dust and dirt) is spread out where the star once lived. The matter would continue to drift outward, but gravitational forces pull the matter back together overtime. Eventually, the recollected star matter forms into a dense ball again and creates energy. Thus, the death of stars leads to new stars - it is a circle of life.