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I came across an article that shows how the Sun looks from other planets of our solar system.

Now I am wondering, how does our Sun look from an exoplanet? I am guessing it must be looking like a 'star', but I wanted some reference to support that.

Prince Pugs
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puzzled
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1 Answers1

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The sun is a yellow dwarf star, so looking at any yellow dwarf star in the night sky will give a good example. Alpha Centauri A is also a yellow dwarf, albeit a little bigger than the sun, so our view of it should be similar to the view of our sun from Alpha Centauri.

From NASA's page on it, here is a lovely image:

enter image description here

Rory Alsop
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    And for everyone wondering, how bright would it be, and where in the night sky would I find the Sun, this website has answers for several more or less nearby star systems. From Alpha Centauri, the Sun would be a pretty conspicuous star in the Cassiopeia constellation. – Sebastian Koppehel Nov 01 '22 at 20:30
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    @sebastian-koppehel thanks for https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-blogs/explore-night-bob-king/see-the-sun-from-other-stars/ – puzzled Nov 02 '22 at 03:32