Most asteroids orbit around stars and move faster than them.
No. Asteroids are tiny compared to stars.
If you mean asteroids within our Solar System, then stars. In the Universe, there will be many more asteroids than stars.
They can ONLY move slower than the speed of light.
No, asteroids do not travel faster than light. Light travels at a speed of about 186,282 miles per second (299,792 kilometers per second) in a vacuum, which is the maximum speed at which anything can travel in our universe. Asteroids typically travel much slower than the speed of light.
Fusion reactions in bigger stars happen at a slower rate than in smaller stars because the higher pressure and temperature in bigger stars allow them to overcome the repulsive forces between positively charged atomic nuclei, enabling fusion to occur even at lower rates. Additionally, bigger stars have a larger supply of fuel, which can sustain fusion over longer periods compared to smaller stars.
Stars are tremendously larger than asteroids and do not become asteroids.
No. Asteroids are tiny compared to stars.
If you mean asteroids within our Solar System, then stars. In the Universe, there will be many more asteroids than stars.
YES, 100 stars and 100 asteroids are larger than 250 planets
That's not true at all. Whoever told you that is either misinformed or else pulling your chain.
They can ONLY move slower than the speed of light.
Stars appear to move across the sky due to the rotation of the Earth, whereas the Moon moves across the sky due to its orbit around the Earth. The apparent motion of stars is much slower than that of the Moon, which moves visibly over the course of a night.
they move faster than a snail but slower than a mouse
Yes, some stars move more quickly than others
No, asteroids do not travel faster than light. Light travels at a speed of about 186,282 miles per second (299,792 kilometers per second) in a vacuum, which is the maximum speed at which anything can travel in our universe. Asteroids typically travel much slower than the speed of light.
The gait slower than a canter is the trot!
Well there are actually alot of larger astroids in our solar system, but do to their size, they may move slower or may need more force ro move them around our solars system, because of this they do not appear often unlike smaller atroids which move easily and are more abundent than larger astroids.