Some stars are bigger than the planet like the sun but some are small. The size varies.
Yes, there are even stars smaller than earth. Most are collapsed ancient stars that have become neutron stars and have masses slightly larger than our sun currently has.
Stars appear small to us on Earth because they are extremely far away. The vast distance in space between us and the stars causes them to appear as tiny points of light in the night sky. Additionally, stars emit light that can be easily overwhelmed by the brightness of Earth's atmosphere and city lights, further contributing to their small appearance.
Stars appear small in the sky because they are incredibly far away from Earth. Despite being huge in size, the vast distances between the stars and us make them look like tiny points of light when we observe them from Earth.
Saturn is farther from Earth than both the moon and stars. The moon is the closest astronomical body to Earth, orbiting at an average distance of about 384,400 kilometers. Stars are much farther away, with the closest star to Earth (other than the sun) being over 4 light-years away. Saturn, a planet in our solar system, is located about 1.2 billion kilometers from Earth on average.
Some stars are bigger than the planet like the sun but some are small. The size varies.
Yes, there are even stars smaller than earth. Most are collapsed ancient stars that have become neutron stars and have masses slightly larger than our sun currently has.
Yes, there are even stars smaller than earth. Most are collapsed ancient stars that have become neutron stars and have masses slightly larger than our sun currently has.
Some stars are very far, more then Saturn so they look small.
Stars appear small to us on Earth because they are extremely far away. The vast distance in space between us and the stars causes them to appear as tiny points of light in the night sky. Additionally, stars emit light that can be easily overwhelmed by the brightness of Earth's atmosphere and city lights, further contributing to their small appearance.
Your eyes adapt to the darkness. Also, some stars are so small to the human eye from Earth that it takes a few seconds to spot them.
No. Stars cannot fall to Earth They are far beyond the influence of Earth's gravity and far larger and more massive than Earth. The stars are suns, some larger and brighter than our own but unimaginably far away. The remains of dead stars are composed of extremely dense forms of matter not found on Earth. The "falling stars" are not actually stars; they are meteors, small pieces of rock and metal that burn up as they travel through Earth's upper atmosphere at extreme speeds.
Stars appear small in the sky because they are incredibly far away from Earth. Despite being huge in size, the vast distances between the stars and us make them look like tiny points of light when we observe them from Earth.
The Earth's rotation.
because they are very far away from the earth
No. The stars are well beyond the atmosphere and are not influence by Earth at all. The stars may look small in the sky but they are enormous, far larger than Earth and unimaginably far away.
No, some stars are bigger than the sun :O