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What is a comet? A comet is the leftover material from the formation of stars and planets from billions of years ago. Comets are said to look like “dirty snowballs”
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By Haley Neihart Physics 1040
Comets By Haley Neihart Physics 1040 What is a comet? A comet is
the leftover material from the formation of stars and planets from
billions of years ago.Comets are said to look like dirty snowballs
Nucleus of the comet is the solid core
The coma is a fuzzy cloud surrounding a comet. As a comet gets
close to the sun, the frozen gases begin to heat up.
This heat creates the tail of the comet. A comets tail is formed
when it gets closed to the sun.
Both the tail and the coma are only present when close to the sun.
Dust Tails Dust tails are usually yellow and made up of small
particles illuminated by the sun.Dust tails are usually curved. Gas
Tails Gas ion tails are usually ultraviolet blue
Gas tails form when ultraviolet sunlight makes electrons into ions
through ionization.Gas tails are normally straight. The Kuiper Belt
is beyond the orbit of Neptune, and the Oort Cloud is found resides
beyond Neptune and Pluto. Where are Comets Found? Comets are found
in two main regions of space.The Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud.
Short period comets are found in the Kuiper Belt, and long period
comets are found in the Oort Cloud. The Kuiper Belt The Oort Cloud
A Comets Orbit Comets go around the sun in a highly elliptical
orbit.
They can spend thousands of years in the solar system before
returning to the sun. The closer to the sun, the faster they move
Do Comets Live Forever? Each time a comet visits the sun, it loses
some of its volatiles. Eventually, it becomes just another rocky
mass in the solar system. Many scientists believe that an extinct
comet takes the form of an asteroid. Bibliography What is a Comet?
(2010). Retrieved April 20, 2011, from Fisher, D. (2010). The Space
Place. Retrieved April 20, 2011, from Reagle, M. (2009). Comets.
Retrieved April 20, 2011, from