The Sun is a star also a ball of gas that is of course as we all know is boiling hot.
lots of things are bigger than a astriod ,planets, somtimes a moon, and the biggest star in are solar system.
No. Asteroids are small solar system bodies in orbit around the sun. Stars are massive, luminous balls of plasma that is held together by gravity.
The asteroid 2020 AV2 has the closest perihelion (closest approach to the sun) of any known asteroid, coming within about 6.61 million kilometers of the sun. This asteroid has an elliptical orbit that takes it very close to the sun before swinging out into the outer solar system.
An asteroid will have a larger acceleration when it is nearest to the sun due to the stronger gravitational force exerted by the sun compared to the earth. This acceleration causes the asteroid to move faster when it is closest to the sun.
The term "asteroid" comes from the Greek words "astron," meaning star, and "eidos," meaning form. Combined, they suggest "star-like" or "star-shaped." The name was chosen by the astronomer William Herschel in the early 19th century to describe these small rocky bodies orbiting the Sun.
The Latin term for "little star" is asteroid(Sun-orbiting body smaller than a planet).
Only the star. Asteroids, planets and moons just reflect light from the Sun.
lots of things are bigger than a astriod ,planets, somtimes a moon, and the biggest star in are solar system.
no because the sun is a star and it is made up of extremely powerful heat and if it did then the sun would be like the moon made up of rocks not balls of hottness
No. Asteroids are small solar system bodies in orbit around the sun. Stars are massive, luminous balls of plasma that is held together by gravity.
The asteroid 2020 AV2 has the closest perihelion (closest approach to the sun) of any known asteroid, coming within about 6.61 million kilometers of the sun. This asteroid has an elliptical orbit that takes it very close to the sun before swinging out into the outer solar system.
No. A star is the same as our sun. An asteroid is a large peice of rock flying through space; it can be a small body, or a large body as big as several kilometers across. Asteroids are frequently found to be in orbit around a larger body such as a moon or planet.
No.
An asteroid will have a larger acceleration when it is nearest to the sun due to the stronger gravitational force exerted by the sun compared to the earth. This acceleration causes the asteroid to move faster when it is closest to the sun.
If there is an atmosphere, the light will gradually dim as the asteroid approaches the asteroid.
The word "asteroid" comes from the Greek word "asteroeidēs," which is a combination of "aster," meaning star, and "-oeidēs," meaning resembling. Therefore, "asteroid" translates to "star-like" or "resembling a star" in Greek. This term was first used in the early 19th century to describe the rocky objects orbiting the Sun between Mars and Jupiter.
Asteroid - a small, rocky body that orbits the Sun.