There is a lot of confused thinking and misinformation in some of the other answers.
The sun is a vast blob of gases raised to an incandescant temperature by a thermonuclear (not chemical) reaction that takes place inside it.
It does not eat, sleep, or eliminate waste. It neither thinks nor feels. It cannot move by its own strength, and it has no sensory system, reproduction, or self-knowledge.
Sorry.
2007-03-12 06:19:40
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answer #1
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answered by aviophage 7
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In short, no. The sun is a big ball of fire. Five billion years ago it gained enough mass to fire up - as it were - nuclear fusion began in its core. It threw out matter and gas which eventually formed into the four inner rocky planets and the four outer gas giants. If your 7 year old wants to get extra credit. We used to have nine planets in the solar system but last year the powers that be in the astronomical world decided to downgrade Pluto to a dwarf planet, so officially at least, we only have eight planets.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Hope this helps.
2007-03-12 06:12:33
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answer #2
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answered by elflaeda 7
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That is -simply put- a very complex question.
First, we do not have a definition of what life is (for example theres an ongoing debate whether a virus is a living being or not).
Second, life forms can be as different as possibilities there may be.
Yes, maybe the Sun doesn't eat, sleep, eliminate waste. Or maybe it does: It emits radiation which could be seen as waste, sleep is not a precondition of life but its got eleven year cycles that we dont know what are about (maybe is its sleep?), maybe it doesnt eat or maybe we do not know if it does (we every year detect new readiation sources), and even if it doesn't eat it may be its got needed energy supplies for several billion years so it doesnt need to eat.
Now, actually, the sun was born (yes born) and grows up and will die one day.
Is it alive or isnt it?
2007-03-12 06:37:55
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answer #3
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answered by optiplex523 1
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Sounds a bit deep a question for a seven year old to me.
How exactly does one define life?
The sun is alive in a certain sense and at some point or another it will run out of energy and "die", but that doesn't make it a living thing in the same way as a human, a plant or an animal...
2007-03-12 06:19:02
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answer #4
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answered by Mental Mickey 6
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very nearly something a seven twelve months previous gets for math homework could be achieved and not utilising a calculator. those days, i think of human beings place self belief in calculators too plenty. I consider which you probably did and supply it a thumbs up. A calculator isn't your concepts. all people can punch in some numbers and emblems to uncover the respond in spite of the indisputable fact that it does no longer something for you mentally. it is going to instruct her greater effective if she learns a thank you to try this type of ingredient herself. furnish her help on her homework yet leave the calculator for the worksheets that certainly desire a calculator.
2016-10-02 00:08:33
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Well if you think of it in terms of stars yes! the sun is a living star right now. It has only completed about half of its life cycle. As far as living like we do No! the sun doesn't have a brain that thinks for it. You can consider the sun a living star. It is activitly burning and producing energy.
2007-03-12 06:05:23
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answer #6
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answered by Lighting Bolt 7 2
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Depends upon what your concept of life is. If you think that life is energy, then you could say it was alive. If you are thinking in biological terms, then the answer would have to be no. It depends on the theoretical way you look at things and your general metaphysical view of life.
2007-03-12 06:05:36
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Even though all stars go through a "life cycle" and stars have "birth" and "death" occurences, they are not "alive" in the true sense of the word...
2007-03-12 09:29:45
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answer #8
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answered by Ammy 6
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the sun is a ball of gas-so no it's not a living thing
2007-03-12 06:04:28
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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No! it is a gaint ball of helium and hydrogen burning at millions of degrees C.
2007-03-12 06:04:00
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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