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
If a dwarf star crashed into a planet,the planet would likely explode.
At that distance, there would be no planet - just vaporised gasses.
A planet cannot explode on it's own. A star would experience very little changes if a planet did explode, even one as large as Jupiter.
Not quite sure what the intended question was - - - which star are you asking about? The sun IS a star - the one our planet orbits.
It would be better to ask what would happen if Earth hit a star, as stars are much larger than Earth is. The planet would be vaporized by the intense heat.
most people would think it is a star but it is a planet
It would spin out of earths orbit. And most likely hit a planet, star, comet, or keep on going.
It would make the gravity of the star have more power.As for your question, it all depends.If the planet was bigger than the star, the star would be pulled in gravatationally(if that's even a word).If the star were bigger than the planet, the planet would be pulled in.
If a planet is not in orbit around a star, it would either drift off into space or be captured by another gravitational force. Without being in orbit, a planet would not experience the necessary gravitational pull to maintain a stable path around a star.
That star would be the sun. That's why it's a planet in our solar system.
None of the planets is a star. If it were a star, it would be referred to as a 'star' and not as a 'planet'. With that in mind, it becomes clear that anything still referred to as a 'planet' is in fact a planet and not a star.
No, a sun is not a planet but star.