Imagine you're playing with two kinds of toys: one that glows and shines by itself, and another that shines only when it's near the glowing toy.
Planets are like the second kind of toy, they shine because they’re close to a star, which is like the first toy that glows all by itself. A star is like a giant fireball in space, burning brightly because it makes its own light. It’s so big and hot that it can even burn through millions of years.
How They Work
What Makes Them Different
A star is much bigger and hotter than a planet, and it keeps burning for billions of years. A planet is smaller and cooler, and it just moves around the star like Earth goes around the Sun. So if you want to know what makes a planet different from a star, think about which one is the glowing toy, and which one needs the light from that toy to shine.
Examples
- Imagine a planet as a rock that circles a glowing ball (a star), and the star is what makes the light.
- Planets are small and don't shine on their own, but stars are big and bright because they burn fuel.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does a Black Hole Actually Eat a Star?
- What is Betelgeuse?
- How Do ‘Constellations’ Really Work?
- How do scientists detect exoplanets orbiting distant stars?
- How do black holes form and what are their properties?