The sun is nonliving.
Stars and living things are both made up of elements such as carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. They both go through life cycles, with stars forming, evolving, and eventually dying, similar to how living organisms are born, grow, and eventually pass away. Additionally, both stars and living things play important roles in shaping the universe and supporting life on Earth.
The starting mass of the longest living stars, known as red dwarfs, is around 0.1 to 0.5 times the mass of the Sun. These stars have a very slow rate of nuclear fusion and can live for tens to hundreds of billions of years.
Yes, stars can live for billions of years depending on their size and mass. Stars like our sun can have lifetimes of around 10 billion years. Larger stars may have shorter lifespans, while smaller stars can burn for trillions of years.
No, stars do not reproduce in the same way plants or animals do. Stars form from a process called stellar nucleosynthesis, where elements are fused together in their cores. They do not have the ability to reproduce like living organisms do.
It can't because it is NOT a living organism.
the earth is nonliving but has living organisms on it
it is nonliving
nonliving
nonliving
nonliving
well, I think you meant "are protein living or nonliving". and they are nonliving
nonliving...
steak is nonliving
Iancelet is nonliving.
Nonliving
nonliving Only living things can reproduce themselves.