they very well could but it could take a very long time for it to happen.
No, this is a common misconception. Instead, a rapidly-expanding Sun could very plausibly turn into another 'Jupiter', or a planet very similar in composition and appearance.
Jupiter is quite a bit smaller than the Sun both in appearance from Earth and in actual size.
Jupiter could potentially orbit a black hole the size of Mars - one that size would have an immense(!) gravitational pull and would be significantly more massive than Jupiter. By comparison, the Sun's Schwarzschild radius is only about 3 km - and Mars has a radius around 3,400 km - so a black hole of that size would be in excess of a thousand times the mass of the Sun.
Jupiter is made up of about 90% hydrogen. If it was about 75% larger, it could be another Sun.
On average, Jupiter is 779 million kilometers from the Sun
No, this is a common misconception. Instead, a rapidly-expanding Sun could very plausibly turn into another 'Jupiter', or a planet very similar in composition and appearance.
No, the Sun is about 10 times larger than Jupiter. About 1,000 Jupiters would fit in the Sun
Jupiter is quite a bit smaller than the Sun both in appearance from Earth and in actual size.
Jupiter could potentially orbit a black hole the size of Mars - one that size would have an immense(!) gravitational pull and would be significantly more massive than Jupiter. By comparison, the Sun's Schwarzschild radius is only about 3 km - and Mars has a radius around 3,400 km - so a black hole of that size would be in excess of a thousand times the mass of the Sun.
Sun and Jupiter because Jupiter has more mass and it is closer to the sun.
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun in our solar system.
Jupiter is made up of about 90% hydrogen. If it was about 75% larger, it could be another Sun.
The answer is zero. According to www.nineplanets.org, the radius of Jupiter is 71,492 km as compared to the sun's radius of 697,000 km. This means that inside the Sun, you could probably jam in about 926 Jupiters.
The fifth planet from the Sun is Jupiter.
Jupiter does not orbit the sun in a perfect circle
Jupiter is 800 million kilometers from the sun
Jupiter, of course!