i dont know stop typing in geek answers and quitions
Mass similar to our own Milky Way; about a trillion stars; diameter estimated at 140,000 light-years.Mass similar to our own Milky Way; about a trillion stars; diameter estimated at 140,000 light-years.Mass similar to our own Milky Way; about a trillion stars; diameter estimated at 140,000 light-years.Mass similar to our own Milky Way; about a trillion stars; diameter estimated at 140,000 light-years.
No. Stars vary in lots of aspects, including:* Diameter * Mass * Color (and the related surface temperature) * Chemical composition * Density (related to mass and diameter) * Brightness
Stars are much larger than the moon. The moon is around 3,474 kilometers in diameter, while stars like the sun are many times larger, with the sun being about 1.4 million kilometers in diameter.
Stars can be described by their temperature, size (diameter), brightness (luminosity), color, composition, and age. These characteristics help scientists classify and study stars in the universe.
This is not necessarily true. most of the time stars with a larger diameter have more mass but some stars with a smaller diameter are more dense and have a greater mass. Find a main sequence star chart and you can compare the data.
because the chord can be determine by the diameter and the diameter can be determine by the chord.
to determine the radius if you only have the diameter, you divided the diameter by 2. then there you have it ! you have the radius !
The formula to determine speed is speed = distance / time. To determine the diameter of a circle, the formula is diameter = 2 x radius.
There are huge variations in a star's diameter. Our Sun has a diameter of about 1.4 million kilometers, but a few stars have hundreds of times this diameter - and of course, some stars are smaller than our Sun. It is hard to say what is "normal" with such huge variations, but probably the majority of stars are a little smaller than our Sun.There are huge variations in a star's diameter. Our Sun has a diameter of about 1.4 million kilometers, but a few stars have hundreds of times this diameter - and of course, some stars are smaller than our Sun. It is hard to say what is "normal" with such huge variations, but probably the majority of stars are a little smaller than our Sun.There are huge variations in a star's diameter. Our Sun has a diameter of about 1.4 million kilometers, but a few stars have hundreds of times this diameter - and of course, some stars are smaller than our Sun. It is hard to say what is "normal" with such huge variations, but probably the majority of stars are a little smaller than our Sun.There are huge variations in a star's diameter. Our Sun has a diameter of about 1.4 million kilometers, but a few stars have hundreds of times this diameter - and of course, some stars are smaller than our Sun. It is hard to say what is "normal" with such huge variations, but probably the majority of stars are a little smaller than our Sun.
remain the same... :)
Probably, you can measure the diameter of a wool fibre and get the answer you want.
If you refer to the diameter, a neutron is tiny - only 20-30 kilometers in diameter. In comparison, main sequence stars have a diameter of at least several hundred thousand kilometers.
The masses of the two stars.
Size and temperature determine the brightness of stars.
But you CAN determine the size of the planets: in diameter, overall mass, and in density.
what improved the ability to determine latitude and longitude based on the stars
The sun is larger than some stars but smaller than others. The smallest stars, not counting collapsed remnants, are about a tenth the diameter of the sun. The largest are more than 1,000 times the sun's diameter.