Stars are luminous celestial bodies composed mostly of hydrogen and helium that generate energy through nuclear fusion in their cores. Galaxies are vast systems that contain billions to trillions of stars, along with gas, dust, and dark matter, bound together by gravity. Planets are smaller celestial bodies that orbit stars, forming from the residual material in a star's protoplanetary disk. Together, stars, galaxies, and planets constitute the fundamental components of the universe.
Through intense research it has indicated that stars are not only luminous balls of plasma held by gravity, but are also planets from different galaxies. From a distance, they may seem like stars, but are in fact planets. So yes, you are correct, planets are stars from different galaxies.
No, the stars actually make the planets.
Asteroids, some comets, and dwarf planets are classified as minor planets. Stars and galaxies are much larger than planets There are dwarf planets and these are Ceres Pluto and Eris.
Galaxies are generally a collection of stars. But within any galaxy, there are lots of other objects, including planets. So galaxies are related to planets in some ways.
stars, planets, galaxies, darkness
A scientist who studies celestial bodies such as planets, stars , and galaxies.
Mainly inside of galaxies.
Stars, Planets, nebulae, galaxies.
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.
We can't even see individual STARS in other galaxies, much less PLANETS. We have no idea how many stars are there.
Yes, actually there are trillions of other galaxies with stars, and planets in the universe.
Stars, planets, moons, comets, asteroids and other phenomena.