No, The sun is at the middle stages of its life. In another couple of million years, it will be come a red giant. When the sun becomes a red giant, it will start to expand and engulf Mercury and Venus. Earth will be inhabitable because of its enormous size and heat. Then, as it keeps expanding it will become a supergiant.
No, the definition of a supergiant is a star that has a diameter at least 100 times that of the sun and that is 100 to more than 10,000 times as bright.
Yes because the Sun is not a giant so all giants are bigger than the Sun.
No. The Sun is a main-sequence star. It will not be a red giant for another 5 billion years.(see related link for an image of what the Sun would look like in its red giant phase
Our sun is expected to become a red giant within a few billion years. The red giant star Antares has a diameter 800 times that of the Sun.
When a star turns into a red giant it means the force of the frequency is lighted by the sun. And then when calculating the magnitude it takes time and days for the sun to orbit
The sun enrgey goes in the white dwarf and the sun becomes a giant bright star then it is.
A giant star is smaller than the sun.
The Sun is a Giant ball of burning gases, but the sun is a star so I'm guessing what you are looking for is the Sun or a Star.
The Sun will still be "the Sun", but the next type of star it will become is a "red giant" star.
No. The sun is the nearest star to Earth. The next closes star is more than 250,000 times farther away. The sun is larger than the average star, but not a giant.
the sun is a star not a planet. it is a giant ball of plasma and gases.
The sun is a GIANT ball of gas! It is also a star.
no its a star if it was a gas giant it would be a planet
A yellow star. The Sun is definitely not a red giant; if it were to swell to the size of a red giant (like Antares, for example), our Earth would end up inside the Sun.
Yes because the Sun is not a giant so all giants are bigger than the Sun.
No. The Sun is a main-sequence star. It will not be a red giant for another 5 billion years.(see related link for an image of what the Sun would look like in its red giant phase
Not really. Its mass is 1.8 times that of the Sun, which is a mid-sized star. So while Altair is bigger than the Sun, it is not in the same category as Betelgeuse as an example of a giant star.
super-giant star