what is different between sun and stars
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Explanation:
Star: A star is type of astronomical object consisting of a luminous spheroid of plasma held together by its own gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun.
But a sun: The star that is the central body of the solar system or any other planetary system, around which the planets revolve and from which they receive light and heat is said to be Sun of our solar system or any other planetary system.
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Answer:
The Sun is a perfectly ordinary star -- a great, glowing ball of gas. In its core, it fuses hydrogen into helium, as all stars do for the majority of their lives, in order to generate enough pressure to avoid collapsing under its own gravity.
The Sun is a perfectly ordinary star -- a great, glowing ball of gas. In its core, it fuses hydrogen into helium, as all stars do for the majority of their lives, in order to generate enough pressure to avoid collapsing under its own gravity. In that sense, I think the answer to the question is "Yes."
A subtler aspect of this question might be whether other stars are "suns" in that they have planets of their own. In that case, the answer is "No, not quite." Planets are very common around other stars, orbiting as many as 30 percent of stars similar to the Sun. However, there are plenty of stars for which we have no evidence of orbiting planets.
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