The smallest star is ogletr122b the middle stars are the sun, sirius and rigel there are many stars, but these are some of them. the biggest star is vpceresmajors If the sun was replaced by the largest star earth woud be too hot and dry and life could not exist here. the smallest star is slightly smaller than Jupiter!
mercury venus earth mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus neptune * * * * * VERY SERIOUSLY WRONG! All these are planets not stars! Also, they are in the order of their distance from the sun (a star) rather than in order of size.
There is no largest nor smallest. All you need is another prefix to increase [or decrease] the previous largest [smallest] by a factor of 1000.
Various methods: * Convert the fractions into equivalent fractions with the same denominator; then order by smallest numerator to largest; * Convert the fractions to [approximate] decimals by dividing the numerators by the denominators; then order by the smallest decimal to largest; * Divide the denominators by the numerators; then order by the largest result to the smallest. In all cases list the original fractions.
Asia, Antarctica, Africa, North America, South America, Australia, Europe
To arrange quantities from smallest to largest, first, compare each value to identify the smallest one. Once identified, place it at the beginning of your list, then continue comparing the remaining quantities to find the next smallest. Repeat this process until all quantities are organized in ascending order. Finally, double-check your arrangement to ensure accuracy.
Put the biggest first, the next biggest next... and the smallest last. You may want to convert them all to a common denominator and then order them by numerator wioth the largest first and the smallest last.
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Antarctica Sahara Arabian Desert Gobi Desert
It is the smallest and most dormant of all stars.
In the night sky, celestial objects can be ordered by size from smallest to largest as follows: stars, which are massive balls of gas undergoing nuclear fusion; planets, which are smaller bodies that orbit stars; moons, which are natural satellites that orbit planets; and finally, galaxies, which are vast collections of stars, planets, and other cosmic material. Beyond galaxies, the universe itself encompasses all these objects, making it the largest scale of measurement.
The order of the liters can refer to the arrangement of liquids in terms of their volume, typically from smallest to largest. In the metric system, common liquid measurements include milliliters (mL), centiliters (cL), deciliters (dL), liters (L), and kiloliters (kL). Thus, the order from smallest to largest is: milliliters, centiliters, deciliters, liters, and kiloliters.
Order of planets from largest to smallest goes like this: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Earth, Venus, Mars, Mercury and smallest Pluto.