Sure. There are lots of binary star systems. And even ones with more than that. It is more common than many people realize. Our nearest neighbor is a star system with several stars all orbiting each other, or their center of mass, to be more precise.
The sun is in the middle of the Solar System.
Jupiter has more mass than all the other planets (in the Solar System) together.Jupiter has more mass than all the other planets (in the Solar System) together.Jupiter has more mass than all the other planets (in the Solar System) together.Jupiter has more mass than all the other planets (in the Solar System) together.
A solar system consists of a star and other objects orbiting the star, so obviously the solar system is larger. Some very large stars could be bigger than the solar system of another small star.
The asteroid belt has no stars, the solar system one.
There is only one star in our Solar System - the Sun.In any "solar system", I believe that the maximum number of stars is four; the math becomes unstable for any system with more than 4, and there are only a couple of stable configurations for 4-star-systems. Doubles are relatively common, and triples not especially rare, especially when one of the stars is much larger than the other two.But the vast majority of "solar systems" have only one star, like ours does.1 for each solar system. If there were two or more they will collide and it's hot so fast we me not be able to live anymore.Edit: In fact there are many stars in pairs and they rotate around each otherwithout colliding. It's possible to get planets in such systems, but it wouldbe less likely for life to develop there.In the Solar System there is only one star - the SUN.yes. the sun.In our own solar system, there is only one star (the sun).
No. The sun is the only star in the solar system.
The sun is in the middle of the Solar System.
OUR solar system has only one star, but there are other solar systems which have more than one
Maybe but in the solar system that most readers will be familiar with there is only one star, called the Sun.
Our sun is not bigger than the solar system. The sun is a star, and it contains over 99.9% of the mass of the solar system, but the solar system is much bigger than the sun.
No, the solar system is centred on one star, our star called the Sun. The next nearest star is about 9000 times further away than Neptune.
The most massive object in most solar systems is the sun, which is the central star. Since stars differ in mass, and each star has something different orbiting it, most stars will be larger or smaller than 700x the mass of the bodies orbiting them. In the solar system of which Earth is a part, there are 18 planets, which all orbit the star Sol.
well, there is only one star in OUR solar system, we call it the sun; but there are about 100 BILLION stars in the milky way galaxy, of which our solar system is a part of
Our sun is actually a small star, tons of stars are way bigger than our sun. One. Each star is a sun.
Our star or AKA the sun it is the largest object in our solar system it alone acounts for about 98.88 percent of all objects mass in our solar system
No. The moon is in the solar system. The only star in the solar system is the sun. All other stars are much farther away than any object in the solar system.
There are no inherent limitations to the number of suns a solar system can have. The Koreans have discovered a planetary system with two suns. See link below.