The elements of the Periodic Table are made in thee explosions and these are then flung out into interstellar space.
New stars then form including these supernova remnants and planets round these stars then have iron, and uranium in their makeup.
The Iron in your blood was produced as material from a huge star exploding.
I never heard of an exploding planet, except in science fiction.
Here is a very basic answer... Our solar system was what happened when remnants of a star (that exploded) were pulled together by gravity. First formed planets, then formed the Sun. This is how almost every other solar system is formed...
A planet can not have planets.it probably can have planets say somehow 2 planets crashed together then exploded and little pieces come from the planet
From exploded stars and planets, and from impact debris.
planets will fall to the outer space ,they will collide with each other and they will melt or exploded
If our Sun exploded, it would destroy most of the planets, and kill us all. Fortunately, this does not seem likely.
Scientists had a theory that two comets collided and exploded
probably none in our solar system. WE WOULD ALL GO BOOM
Meteors are the remnants of the the solar system, or in general, of the universe. You can think of them as a planets rejects. When planets form, gases condense, form a core, then meteros or asteriods hit forming planets, they start sculpting the planets surface. They also transport minerals and perhaps even life, frozen within.
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Most likely not. It was probably an object that, due to perturbations by Jupiter's gravity, did not collect as much mass as the planets did.
Many asteroids are the remnants of planets which never got to the size of a full planet. Others are chunks of rock from a celestial object's surface, torn apart by collisions.
Many asteroids are the remnants of planets which never got to the size of a full planet. Others are chunks of rock from a celestial object's surface, torn apart by collisions.