All galaxies.
A white dwarf star is the remains of a medium sized star that has ended it's life - so they are everywhere.
Main sequence stars are bigger.
YES. A typical white dwarf star is only a bit bigger than the Earth.
Lmao, 220,000ly gaalxy vs. a dwarf star that has a diameter of 1.3mln km lmao it's obvious Andromeda is a bigger
white dwarf star
No, a white dwarf is generally smaller than a main sequence star because it is the remnant core of a star that has exhausted its nuclear fuel and collapsed. Main sequence stars are actively undergoing nuclear fusion and are typically larger in size.
A white dwarf is much larger than a neutron star.
Yes.
Many stars are bigger than the sun. In fact the sun is called a yellow dwarf, or a G dwarf star meaning it is relatively small (i.e. a dwarf) compared to the "average star" in our galaxy.
Main sequence stars are bigger.
YES. A typical white dwarf star is only a bit bigger than the Earth.
Generally, they are not much bigger than the Earth.
It is impossible for the sun to be a dwarf galaxy because the sun is a star. But if you're asking if it's a dwarf star, then no, otherwise we'd be dead.
The obvious reason is that the specific star has bigger density compared with the Sun. For example, that star could be a "white dwarf star". A white dwarf mostly contains "electron degenerate matter", which is very dense. A white dwarf is a small dense star.
No. A dwarf star is a small star. A white dwarf is just one particular type of dwarf star, but there are other types.
Lmao, 220,000ly gaalxy vs. a dwarf star that has a diameter of 1.3mln km lmao it's obvious Andromeda is a bigger
No a white dwarf is a small compact star.
Depends what type of dwarf star. - Our Sun is a yellow dwarf.