Social Sciences, asked by anujkharanger, 1 year ago

Tare dur hai ya planet

Answers

Answered by Bhavyasri369
1
The stars are more farther than planets
Answered by soyam4up90i2p
0
Hey friend!!!!!!!!!!

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Here is your answer........

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When the universe was formed, the early stars were gigantic. They used to live only for a few million years and then blast their materials off in the space far away. The process continued and we got smaller stars over time.
This is the image of NGC 248 in the Small Magellanic Cloud, taken from the Hubble Space Telescope. It is a nebula:
A nebula is the birth place of a star, and is the remnant of an earlier dead star. All the bright lights inside the nebula are stars in birth.
When a star is to be formed, the cloud near it (usually billions of kilometers in dimension) gets condensed near its center due to gravity. See the image for better visualization.
The planets that are formed near the stars are actually guests that came late for the party. The planets are formed from the remnants of the cloud after the formation of the star. Since most of the light gases (Hydrogen and Helium) get used in the making of the star, the the heavier elements are left, which too, have come nearer to the star over time owing to its mass. Accumulating over time, they become solid and keep revolving around the star that contains the lion’s share of the mass of the solar system.
As the clouds where stars are born are light years in diameter, the nearest born star can only be light years away, explaining the distance between stars. Since planets are made up of the remnant of the cloud used in the making of their central star, they tend to be much closer.

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