None of them. If any planet were to crash into the Sun, the planet would be instantly vaporized.
You may be thinking of the planet Saturn, which is so light that if it could be placed in a big enough bathtub, would float.
Saturn because if you put it on a river big enough it would float.
It depends on how close If you dropped the planet Earth in to the sun it would melt quicker than you can blink.
Gravity and inertia both contribute to their orbits. Inertia tends to move a planet away from the Sun, while the Sun's gravity tries to pull the planet closer. Without one of them, a planet would either float away from the Sun (inertia only) or burn up from the Sun (gravity only).
No, a sun is not a planet but star.
The sun is not a planet it is a star
Neptune. It is the farthest planet from the sun.
if a planet was to close to the sun it would burn up
Given that you live when you are there, it would be determined by knowing the density of the sun's surface compared the yours
The fifth planet from the sun is Jupiter.Counting outwards from the sun, the fifth planet in our solar system would be our largest and most massive planet, Jupiter.
Uranus is the seventh planet from the sun in our solar system.
That Saturn's density is so low that it would float on water (if a big enough body of water were found).
If the sun suddenly died and no longer lit up the world the first planet to be affected would be Mercury. Mercury would be affected first because it is the closest planet to the sun.