No they do not have planets around them,because stars are just a big ball of gas just like the sun.
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Galaxies/nebulae are at the top of the tree; each one contains several billion stars. Each star might have many planets orbiting around it, and planets can have many moons.
Because the stars are relatively so far away, all planets of this solar system have the same number of stars near them.
Planets orbit stars.
Planets are not considered satellites, but rather celestial bodies that orbit around stars, like our Sun. Satellites are objects that orbit larger celestial bodies, such as planets orbiting around stars or moons orbiting around planets.
No. Stars are like suns, around which planets may orbit.
Planets orbit the sun. Stars do not.
On the contrary! A star has planets, which circulate it. And planets have moons. Stars do not circle planets.
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".
Planets have no stars in them.
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Galaxies/nebulae are at the top of the tree; each one contains several billion stars. Each star might have many planets orbiting around it, and planets can have many moons.
planets do not shine with their own energy but shine because of energy of stars. they revolve around stars
there are more planets than stars because to every star there could have several planets
No. We know what the stars are. They are not planets. They are distant suns, many of which do have undiscovered planets.
These are planets that are in orbit around other stars, known as exosolar planets.
That doesn't make sense. There are stars, and there are planets. If you mean "planets around stars, other than the Sun", those are usually called "extrasolar planets" or "exoplanets".