What
Is A Comet?
A comet is a very small solar system body made
mostly of ices mixed with smaller amounts of dust and rock. Most comets are no
larger than a few kilometres across. The main body of the comet is called the
nucleus, and it can contain water, methane, nitrogen and other ices.
When a comet is heated by the Sun, its ices begin
to sublimate (similar to the way dry ice “fizzes” when you leave it in
sunlight). The mixture of ice crystals and dust blows away from the comet
nucleus in the solar wind, creating a pair of tails. The dust tail is what we
normally see when we view comets from Earth.
A plasma tail also forms when molecules of gas are
“excited” by interaction with the solar wind. The plasma tail is not normally
seen with the naked eye, but can be imaged. Comets normally orbit the Sun, and
have their origins in the Oort Cloud and Kuiper Belt regions of the outer solar
system.
Facts About Comets
There are many misconceptions about
comets, which are simply pieces of solar system ices travelling in orbit around
the Sun. Here are some fascinating and true facts about comets.
1. The nucleus of a
comet is made of ice and can be as small as a few meters across to giant
boulders a few kilometres across.
2. The closest point in
a comet’s orbit to the Sun is called “perihelion”. The most distant point is
called “aphelion”.
3. As a comet gets
closer to the Sun, it begins to experience heat. That causes some of its ices
to sublimate (similar to dry ice sizzling in sunlight). If the ice is close to
the comet’s surface, it may form a small “jet” of material spewing out from the
comet like a mini-geyser.
4. Material streams from
comets and populates the comet’s orbit. If Earth (or another planet) happens to
move through that stream, those particles fall to Earth as meteor showers.
5. As a comet gets close
to the Sun, it loses some of its mass due to the sublimation. If a comet goes
around enough times, it will eventually break up. Comets also break up if they
come TOO close to the Sun or another planet in their orbits.
6. Comets are usually
made of frozen water and supercold methane, ammonia and carbon dioxide ices.
Those are mixed with rock, dust, and other metallic bits of solar system
debris.
7. Comets have two
tails: a dust tail (which you can see with the naked eye) and a plasma tail,
which is easily photographed but difficult to see with your eyes.
8. Comet orbits are
usually elliptical.
9. Many comets formed in
the Oort Cloud and Kuiper Belts, two of the outermost regions of the solar
system.
10. Comets are not
spaceships or alien bases. They are fascinating bits of solar system material
that date back to the formation of the Sun and planets.

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