If a dwarf star crashed into a planet,the planet would likely explode.
Yes, a dwarf planet can become a moon if it is captured by the gravitational field of a larger planet. This process can happen when a dwarf planet gets close enough to a planet and is pulled in by its gravity. Once captured, the dwarf planet would then orbit the larger planet as one of its moons.
That's not possible a star is a sun, planets revolve around a star, and the planet would be destroyed far far far far far before the star reached it, if that was even possible
A black dwarf is not a planet; it is the remnant of a long dead star that has cooled. A black dwarf would range from about 7,000 to 17,000 miles in diameter.
The dwarf planet discovered in 2005 is named Eris. This dwarf planet is located in the Kuiper Belt, a region beyond Neptune in the outer solar system.
It is giant. If it was small, it would be a dwarf planet instead of a planet.
dooms day.
no it's a dwarf planet I would think that it is a dwarf planet, but its moon, Sharon, is nearly as big as it, so some MAY argue that Sharon is a dwarf planet and Pluto is the moon, but considering Pluto is slightly bigger than Sharon, I would think that Sharon would orbit Pluto rather than Pluto orbiting Sharon.
Everyone on board would blow up
Neptune. It would be Pluto, but Pluto is a dwarf planet ( a planet that was a planet, but decided that it wasn't a planet)
It isn't a planet. It doesn't exist in the solar system anymore. As a dwarf planet, but not as a proper planet.
In order to be classified as a dwarf planet, an object has to be large enough to have achieved hydrostatic equilibrium - that is, forced by gravity into a roughly spherical shape, unlike the odd shapes of asteroids. The lower limit to the size or mass of a dwarf planet is thus much more a matter of observation than formal definition. The size would thus depend upon its mass, the lower limit of which would be dictated by properties of matter. To be considered a proper dwarf planet it would also need to be in solar orbit and not, for example, a moon of another planet; it would further not have cleared the neighborhood around its orbit, as, for example, Pluto has not.
The sun would win.