Unless a planet is made from an explosive compoundor is shot with a nuclear bomb, then it is unlikly to explode in the first place.
However, if the star exploded, then all the planets orbiting that star, would most likely be caught in the blast.
If a dwarf star crashed into a planet,the planet would likely explode.
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.
they become super novas and explode
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
The star TRAPPIST-1 has three known planets. Such planets are not easy to utterly destroy, unless they happen to fall into their star, or collide with one another (in which case they would presumably form a larger planet).
We'd be totally screwed. ______________________ Seriously, it would ruin our whole day. It would vaporize our planet and turn us all into steamy goo. Good thing for us that the Sun is too small to explode!
The earth would only rotate the sun because the sun is a star so only stars and meteors would be left.
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.
A star seldom finds another star near it because of the pull of gravity. If two stars are too close to each other they will both explode because their pull of gravity is very strong. They will pull each other in and eventually, when they hit each other they will explode. For more information, visit alienearths.org. This website has a model of our solar system. You can click and drag planets and stars to wherever you want to in the solar system. It will show you some basic information about the orbits of planets and the effects if the planets are placed in a certain order.
That's the normal configuration - for planets to travel around their central star. If the planet would NOT move, it would quickly fall into the central star.That's the normal configuration - for planets to travel around their central star. If the planet would NOT move, it would quickly fall into the central star.That's the normal configuration - for planets to travel around their central star. If the planet would NOT move, it would quickly fall into the central star.That's the normal configuration - for planets to travel around their central star. If the planet would NOT move, it would quickly fall into the central star.
A star can have planets, those planets can have moons: that's the heirarchy. Actually Betelgeuse is a red giant, which means that any planets it might have had are likely to have been swallowed up as the star expanded, which is what will happen to the Earth when the Sun swells up. But it won't happen for the next few billion years.
I believe the idea here is that the stars are more likely to explode as a result of a merger.If one of the stars explodes before that... Well, in general, if one star in a binary system explodes, you can expect part of the matter to pass over to the other star, as a result to its gravitational attraction. This in turn may make the remaining star explode sooner than it would otherwise - perhaps almost immediately, depending on the exact situation.