Because they are billions and billions and billions of miles away from us.
Yes, stars radiate heat energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation, which includes visible light, ultraviolet light, and infrared radiation. This is how stars produce light and heat that we can see and feel from Earth.
We do get light from the other stars; that is why we can see them. We do not feel their heat or see very much light from them because they are millions of times farther away from us than the sun is.
The underlying point is actually incorrect, we feel (quite potently) the heat of the Sun and the Sun is a star like any other. However, as the question is likely talking about stars other than the sun, the heat actually does reach Earth, but because of the distance traveled, is a very minute amount of heat (only a few degrees above absolute freezing). This small amount of heat is eclipsed by the immense amount of heat that the Earth receives from the Sun and from internal radioactive heat generation in the Earth's core. As a result, humans cannot feel it.
We don't feel the heat and light of stars like the Sun from vast distances because space is a vacuum, which means there's no medium to carry heat through conduction or convection. Additionally, the intensity of light and heat diminishes with distance due to the inverse square law, meaning that as the distance from a star increases, the energy received per unit area decreases significantly. While stars are indeed massive and hot, the immense distances between them and Earth reduce their effects on us to a manageable level.
The heat and the light in stars is the same thermal nuclear fission that our Sun (a star) produces.
Simply put, they are much to far away for us to feel their heat.
Because, they are in a different galaxy!! :LL
Stars make their own light, but they are not cold. Stars are extremely hot. We do not feel their heat because they are incredibly distant.
Yes, stars radiate heat energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation, which includes visible light, ultraviolet light, and infrared radiation. This is how stars produce light and heat that we can see and feel from Earth.
The heat arrives on earth, it is just so weak when it gets here that our bodies can't sense it.
We do get light from the other stars; that is why we can see them. We do not feel their heat or see very much light from them because they are millions of times farther away from us than the sun is.
The underlying point is actually incorrect, we feel (quite potently) the heat of the Sun and the Sun is a star like any other. However, as the question is likely talking about stars other than the sun, the heat actually does reach Earth, but because of the distance traveled, is a very minute amount of heat (only a few degrees above absolute freezing). This small amount of heat is eclipsed by the immense amount of heat that the Earth receives from the Sun and from internal radioactive heat generation in the Earth's core. As a result, humans cannot feel it.
No. Stars are made primarily of hydrogen and helium. They produce enormous amounts of heat but are not made of heat.
We don't feel the heat and light of stars like the Sun from vast distances because space is a vacuum, which means there's no medium to carry heat through conduction or convection. Additionally, the intensity of light and heat diminishes with distance due to the inverse square law, meaning that as the distance from a star increases, the energy received per unit area decreases significantly. While stars are indeed massive and hot, the immense distances between them and Earth reduce their effects on us to a manageable level.
Stars are hotter than planets. Stars are massive balls of gas that produce heat and light through nuclear reactions in their cores, while planets do not produce their own heat and rely on the heat they receive from the star they orbit.
because it has heat and u feel heat
Yes. That's how you feel heat from the sun, see light from stars, and receive TV from the satellite.