To ignite nuclear fusion, a certain temperature is required; and this, in turn, requires a certain mass. A large planet (or more precisely, a massive planet) could become a star if it acquires additional mass. Note that there is an intermediate stage, the brown dwarf - which is basically an object that is massive enough for the fusion of deuterium (hydrogen-2), but not massive enough to fuse regular hydrogen (hydrogen-1). Deuterium is much rarer than the regular hydrogen.
No, it will always be a planet.
No planet we know of belongs to a triple star system. It is also, due to gravitational interactions, unlikely - but not impossible - that a planet could be formed within a triple star system.
a star is a dying planet and a planet is a living star
Generally a planet.An object that orbits a star can be defined as a planet.
The twin star theory is that there may be another star similar to the star we call "the sun" that could possibly make life on another planet possible.
No, it will always be a planet.
A planet cannot become a star. A star is an object that is massive enough to release energy via nuclear fusion. A planet is much less massive.
Jupiter. However it would have to be about 10 times bigger, at least.
The star could be a planet!
A planet can't form into a star. Stars born from cold nebulas.
There's no such thing.
In theory, the death of a star would be the cause of the death of a planet, making both catastrophic events. The death of a planet can range from the destruction of the vegetation to the destruction of the planet itself. Either way, if something makes the planet uninhabitable, then it is considered dead. The death of a star is quite different. A star doesn't have an ecosystem or anything like that. However, if a star were to go super nova, it could wipe out several planets as well, thus making them into dead planets. A star could also just fizzle out, which could cause the death of planet(s) that use the star for heat, like our sun. If our sun were to go out, our planet would become dead. I hope this is what you were asking for, and sorry if it's not. My source of information is my knowledge gained from watching Star Wars, Star Trek, Doctor Who, and the Sarah Jane Adventures. :-)
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Only a very, very few stars have mass enough to become supernova. Jupiter is a planet not a star. It is far to small to become a star, let alone a supernova.
A star 'turns on' when it becomes large enough that there is enough pressure squeezing its insides to start a nuclear reaction. The pressure comes from gravity of the mass of the star. the planet Jupiter could become a star if it got significantly larger.
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