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planetstar

Planetstar is a term that appears in speculative literature and informal discourse but is not an established category in astronomy. It is used to describe objects that blend planetary and stellar properties, either as a planet‑mass body that temporarily exhibits star‑like luminosity or as a body near the planet–brown dwarf boundary with unusual energy output. There is no single, accepted definition.

Etymologywise, planetstar is a portmanteau of planet and star. In most usages, the term implies a spectrum

In real-world astronomy, the closest analogues are brown dwarfs, hot‑start planets, and self‑luminous young planets. The

In fiction and thought experiments, planetstars often function as a device to explore extreme environments, unusual

See also: brown dwarf, exoplanet, star–planet interaction.

of
intermediate
properties,
with
meanings
varying
by
author.
Some
writers
imagine
a
planet
with
an
unusually
hot,
bright
surface
or
atmosphere,
while
others
refer
to
objects
in
a
mass
regime
where
brief
fusion
could
occur
but
long‑term
sustaining
fusion
does
not
take
place.
distinction
between
planet
and
substellar
object
is
typically
drawn
by
mass
and
the
presence
or
absence
of
sustained
nuclear
fusion.
Observationally,
researchers
rely
on
luminosity,
spectral
features,
and
atmospheric
composition.
A
true
“planetstar”
designation
is
not
used
in
standard
catalogs
or
classifications.
energy
budgets,
or
novel
habitability
scenarios.
They
provide
a
way
to
consider
how
planetary
atmospheres
and
surfaces
would
respond
to
sustained,
star‑like
energy
input
or
to
discuss
formation
pathways
under
intense
radiation.