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they would probably collide with a comet, asteroid, the Sun, or another planet.
jupiter
That depends on the gravity at the surface of that planet. On the moon it would be 1/6 your weight on earth. On mars I think it is 1/3, on Jupiter it would be about 5000 times, though no ones checked that yet.
Depends... if we manage to create the right technology to travel 20 light years to our nearest 'Goldilocks' planet, then yes its possible and i hope that does happen during our life time...living on another planet would be so awesome :D
A large gas planet like Saturn would probably not last as an inner planet - the sun would probably pull Saturn into it and destroy it.
they would probably collide with a comet, asteroid, the Sun, or another planet.
Nothing would happen to mass, but as weight is technically a force due to gravity, based on mass, the weight would be doubled, but again mass would remain the same.
When you travel from the planet Earth to another place, such as the International Space Station or the moon, your mass would remain the same but your weight would change.
it would break or if a small planet bumped itnto juipeter, juipeter would have another moon.
Nothing No One Can Hit A Planet
A moon? I don't think a planet orbiting another planet would be called a planet.
If a dwarf star crashed into a planet,the planet would likely explode.
jupiter
That depends on the gravity at the surface of that planet. On the moon it would be 1/6 your weight on earth. On mars I think it is 1/3, on Jupiter it would be about 5000 times, though no ones checked that yet.
Weight decreases as gravity decreases.
Depends... if we manage to create the right technology to travel 20 light years to our nearest 'Goldilocks' planet, then yes its possible and i hope that does happen during our life time...living on another planet would be so awesome :D
At that distance, there would be no planet - just vaporised gasses.