The Sun is a star, that only comes out at day, all the other stars you see at night are still there but you cant see them.:)
No, stars do not revolve around the Sun. The Sun is just one of the billions of stars in our galaxy, the Milky Way, and stars have their own independent motion through the galaxy. The Sun's gravity keeps the planets in orbit around it, but it does not control the motion of other stars.
Our Sun is a star. As stars go, is a "lower end of middle" kind of star. Astronomers describe it as being about as ordinary as stars get. There are many stars that are spectacularlybigger than our Sun, and many - some much bigger - that are quite a bit hotter than our sun. Stars like our sun, however, have one advantage: They are long-lived. The normal life of our sun is estimated to be about 10 billion years, which it is about halfway through at the moment.
life and death or sun and black hole
The energy radiated by the Sun comes from nuclear fusiondeep in its core. Main sequence stars like the Sun fuse hydrogen into helium until they exhaust their supply, over billions of years. Eventually they may swell into red giant stars that fuse helium into carbon.
No.
No, stars are always present in the sky but they are not visible during the day because of the sun's brightness. As the Earth rotates, different stars come into view at night while others disappear below the horizon.
from what i know, not all of it. some comes from the sun, and some comes from the moon.
The stars doesn't go any where it just camouflage with the colour of the sky and sun.
Our Sun is just another star - above average, with respect to its brightness, but really nothing extraordinary, as stars go. Some stars are bigger than the sun, and some are smaller.
The Sun is classified as a medium to medium-small yellow star. As stars in our galaxy go, the Sun is, truthfully, about as ordinary as stars get - but it does the job!
The energy comes from "nuclear fusion". Stars like the Sun create helium from hydrogen by this method, and that gives out energy. That's how the Sun creates energy.
The Sun is a star, that only comes out at day, all the other stars you see at night are still there but you cant see them.:)
Stars' energy comes from the fusion of hydrogen atoms into helium atoms, initially.
No, stars do not revolve around the Sun. The Sun is just one of the billions of stars in our galaxy, the Milky Way, and stars have their own independent motion through the galaxy. The Sun's gravity keeps the planets in orbit around it, but it does not control the motion of other stars.
For the moment, let us just think about one motion - - Earth's spin (or rotation) on its axis. Earth rotates or spins toward the east, and that's why the Sun, Moon, planets, and stars all rise in the east and make their way westward across the sky.
The stars do not go around the sun. The sun is a star just like the ones you see at night. It only appears brighter because it is much closer than any other star. The stars instead orbit the cenet of the galaxy.