It is possible but a planet in a binary star system would have a complex orbit that might not be very stable in the long term, so there is a chance of it being swallowed up by one of the stars.
Planets orbit stars.
No. Dwarf planets orbit stars just like planets do. Stars orbit the center of their galaxy. An object orbiting a planet would be a moon.
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.
They don't - new born stars and planets are formed together.
Earth and Mars are planets, not stars. Stars are massive celestial bodies that generate light and heat through nuclear reactions in their cores, while planets are smaller bodies that orbit stars. Earth and Mars are both planets in our solar system that orbit the Sun.
Planets orbit stars.
On the contrary! A star has planets, which circulate it. And planets have moons. Stars do not circle planets.
Planets and stars have gravity.
The Solar System Makes the planets and the Stars.
Moons orbit planets. Planets orbit stars. Some stars orbit other stars, or orbit their mutual center of gravity. Stars orbit the center of the galaxy. Galaxies may orbit the center of the "galactic group".
No. Stars are like suns, around which planets may orbit.
Astronomers (and their ilk) study stars and planets.
Planets orbit the sun. Stars do not.
None Stars are gas Planets are solid
An Astronomer is a scientist who studies the stars and planets.
No. Dwarf planets orbit stars just like planets do. Stars orbit the center of their galaxy. An object orbiting a planet would be a moon.
Yes and no because when you look up in the sky some of those stars are planets but techinacally they aren't stars.