Away from the sun
The Tail of a Comet always points Away from the Sun.
A comet's tail points away from the Sun. It is the 'solar wind' that 'blows' the tail away from the Sun.
The tail of a comet is generally directed toward the sun. It is an easy way to tell if a comet is heading toward or away from the sun.
The tail of a comet is always pointing directly away from the sun.
It is away from the Sun.
make yourself a dang casadilla
in the oppisite direction
WEST
No, the comet's tail always points away from the sun. It has nothing to do with its direction of travel.
A comet is comprised mostly of ice. The tail of the comet is caused by cosmic winds, from our sun, blasting particles off the comet's surface, the tail does NOT point in the opposite direction of travel, as one might expect, but points directly away from the source of the solar winds. That's why a comets tail, (from our perspective) may be traveling in a certain direction but have it's tail pointing in the SAME direction.
Yes that is correct The tail will always point into the direction of the body that has the strongest gravitic influence on it.
The sun ejects solar winds which move much faster than any comet. This causes a stream of material (the tail) to point away from the Sun, irrespective of the direction the comet is travelling. The Sun's radiation may also have an effect. (Source: Wikipedia)Bad definition!
All comet tails point away from the Sun.
No, the comet's tail always points away from the sun. It has nothing to do with its direction of travel.
A comet is comprised mostly of ice. The tail of the comet is caused by cosmic winds, from our sun, blasting particles off the comet's surface, the tail does NOT point in the opposite direction of travel, as one might expect, but points directly away from the source of the solar winds. That's why a comets tail, (from our perspective) may be traveling in a certain direction but have it's tail pointing in the SAME direction.
Yes that is correct The tail will always point into the direction of the body that has the strongest gravitic influence on it.
The sun ejects solar winds which move much faster than any comet. This causes a stream of material (the tail) to point away from the Sun, irrespective of the direction the comet is travelling. The Sun's radiation may also have an effect. (Source: Wikipedia)Bad definition!
The dust tail and the gas tail BOTH point away from the Sun (or in the direction of the Solar Wind). As the gas tail is a little less dense, its point is a little more directly away.
A comet's tail points away from the sun
All comet tails point away from the Sun.
Close to or at perihelion.
Solar wind makes a comet's tail always point away from the Sun.
The tail of a comet always points away from the Sun, no matter which direction the comet is moving. This is because the Sun heats the comet up and blasts away the 'dirty ice' it's composed of, creating a tail that streams away from the Sun.This means that a comet can actually be travelling such that it's tail is ahead of it.
The tail is actually moving away from the comet. The solar wind pushes the dust and ice particles away from the comet as it melts. The ice particles reflects the light from the sun allowing us to see the tail. In fact, the comet's tail is never behind it. It is always to one side of its direction of travel.
Same as any other comet: away from the Sun.Same as any other comet: away from the Sun.Same as any other comet: away from the Sun.Same as any other comet: away from the Sun.