No, not all stars are identical. Stars vary in size, mass, temperature, luminosity, and chemical composition, leading to different classifications such as main-sequence stars, giants, and white dwarfs. Their life cycles also differ based on these characteristics, resulting in a diverse range of stellar phenomena in the universe.
like people, no 2 stars are absolutely identical so yes
30
Of corse,all electrons are identical all protons and neutrons are also identical
Two vectors are identical when all their components are identical. An alternative definition, for vectors used in physics, is that they are identical when both the magnitude and the direction are identical.
NO
Yes, they both are [all but] Identical.
Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.Kerry, with 49 All-stars up to 2012.
no,but all stars have a name
cheerforce all stars is a cheerleading team in rancho cucamoga,ca ps: fierce all stars hates cherrforce all stars
No. Identical twins are born anytime. No specific month.
All stars and galaxies are in the universe.
Well there are cases of identical septuplets. Like identical twins, identical septuplets are all born looking identical and of the same gender only difference is there are 7 children not 2