If you mean the planets in our solar system then yes, very easily.
All the planets in the solar system would fit in the sun with lots of space left over.
you can fit 1million planets the size of earth in the sun
No, the sun cannot swallow all eight planets. The sun is much larger than the planets in our solar system, but it will not engulf them. However, the sun will eventually expand into a red giant and could engulf the innermost planets.
All moons orbit around planets, whereas not all planets have moons. Moons are generally smaller in size compared to planets and lack an atmosphere. Moons also lack the ability to emit light on their own, unlike planets which may reflect light from the sun.
The Sun is incredibly vast, with a volume about 1.41 million times that of Earth. This means that approximately 1.3 million Earths could fit inside the Sun. However, if you consider other planets, the number would vary significantly; for example, nearly 60,000 Jupiter-sized planets could fit within the Sun. Overall, the Sun's immense size allows it to contain a staggering number of smaller celestial bodies.
99.8 percent of the total mass of our solar system is the Sun, and most of the rest is Jupiter. If there were 500 planets the size of Jupiter, they would STILL all fit inside the Sun.
All the planets in the solar system would fit in the sun with lots of space left over.
Approximately 1.3 million Jupiter-sized planets could fit inside the Sun.
you can fit 1million planets the size of earth in the sun
Earth is the third planet from the Sun.
No, the sun cannot swallow all eight planets. The sun is much larger than the planets in our solar system, but it will not engulf them. However, the sun will eventually expand into a red giant and could engulf the innermost planets.
All of the planets except Jupiter could fit inside Jupiter. Jupiter is bigger than all the other planets combined. All the planets including Jupiter could easily fit inside the sun, which weighs more than a thousand times all the rest of the solar system combined. If the planets were collapsed into neutronium, their combined volume would be significantly less than 1/4 mile (that of typical neutron stars), which could probably fit inside the Grand Canyon, and perhaps even a big warehouse. Of course, this mass would also be very heavy.
True. About 1.3 million Earths could fit inside the Sun, so only about 1000 Earth-sized planets would fit within it.
All moons orbit around planets, whereas not all planets have moons. Moons are generally smaller in size compared to planets and lack an atmosphere. Moons also lack the ability to emit light on their own, unlike planets which may reflect light from the sun.
The Sun is incredibly vast, with a volume about 1.41 million times that of Earth. This means that approximately 1.3 million Earths could fit inside the Sun. However, if you consider other planets, the number would vary significantly; for example, nearly 60,000 Jupiter-sized planets could fit within the Sun. Overall, the Sun's immense size allows it to contain a staggering number of smaller celestial bodies.
Probably not, because as per Physical Science rules, the more mass an object has the more gravity it has. In this case, the sun is so large that all the planets in the solar system could fit in it with space left! If the sun wasn't there, there would be some level of gravity, but definitely not enough to keep the planets aligned.
Could be a Star Cluster or a galaxy.