Is a solar flare billions of stars held together by gravitational attraction?


Question:


Answer:
No, a solar flare is a mass of superheated gas is ejected from the surface of the sun. This can occur on other stars.

What you are describing is a galaxy, which contains billions upon billions of stars. Clusters of stars within a galaxy is very common, and there are many stars that orbit each other, and these are called binary star systems.
The Pliades star cluster is an example, and this cluster is visible now in the constellation Taurus, which is a cluster of "young" stars. You can see it without a telescope or binoculars.
Still no.
lol a solar flare are hot spots on the sun where flame shoots up
no what you described is called a solar system
no. google "solar flare"
No.A solar flare is a something that only involves the sun.
You are describing a galaxy
if you use a very loose definition of what a star is, then i guess you could look at it that way, but otherwise, no, not so much
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