Yes. All the stars are round and all the planets are round.
Stars located near the Earth's poles that can be seen year-round at all times of night are called circumpolar stars. These stars appear to rotate around the pole and do not rise or set like other stars in the sky due to the Earth's rotation.
All the stars appear to go right round the sky every 23 hours and 56 minutes. But other than that, for example if you look every night at exactly midnight, all the stars go right round once a year.
Planets, moons, and stars are round due to gravity. Gravity pulls objects towards their center of mass, causing them to form into a spherical shape. This is the most stable and efficient configuration for large celestial bodies.
aristotle
Elliptical galaxies are massive blobs of stars characterized by their round or ellipsoidal shapes. These galaxies are composed mainly of older stars and have little to no ongoing star formation activity.
Yes!!!! The correct term is "spherical", which means round in all dimensions like a ball. (A hoop is round, but is not spherical) Stars and planets are not perfect spheres, but they are very close to perfect spheres.
they are round and don't have points
Because the Earth and all the planets move in orbits round the Sun, while the stars appear to be fixed if we disregard the Earth's daily rotation.
Because they are too round to be pointy.
$10,000
If I understand the question correctly, the answer is YES. There are billions of stars. The earth happens to rotate round the one that we call the sun. All other stars are all a lot further away.