Yes. Sirius actually consists of two stars. The main object, Sirius A is not only bigger than Earth but is almost twice the diameter of the sun. The secondary star, Sirius B is a collapsed remnant of a star called a white dwarf. It is slightly smaller than Earth but far denser.
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Sirius is the brightest star...Polaris is bigger then Sirius, Polaris is 360 to 820 light years away from earth, and Sirius is only 8.6 light years away. The Sirius star is known as the dog constalation, The polaris star is found at the tip and corner of the big dipper and the little dipper
Well, darling, Sirius is about twice the size of our dear old Sun, and the Sun could fit about 1.3 million Earths inside it. So, if we do the math (which I'm sure you could handle), Sirius could fit around 2.6 million Earths inside it. But hey, who's counting? Just know it's a whole lot of Earths.
Sirius, which consists of both Sirius A and Sirius B is in the constellation Canis Major, which, if you are looking south, appears below and to the left of Orion. Sirius B itself is too dim to be seen from Earth; the vast majority of the light from Sirius is from Sirius A. Even then, as a binary system, the two stars are too close together for us to see them separately.
Sirius is considerably hotter than Antares.
Sirius does not orbit the Sun.