If the atmosphere does not burn it up then it will hit with the force left over. Most of the time it will leave a crater in the surface of the ground or it will displace a large amount of water if it lands in a body of water. Depending on the size of the comet and the life around it will determine the full extent of the damage.
When comets enter the inner solar system, they usually are pulled into the sun. Comets entering into the inner system is quite rare.
It is not a planet, and it is not a comet.
That would be Pluto -- and it is not a planet, it is indeed a comet.
Depends on how big the comet is, where the comet hits, and what religious beliefs you have.
When it is from very far away, nothing. But when a comet approaches the inner Solar System,solar radiation causes the volatile materials within the comet to vaporize and stream out of the nucleus, carrying dust away with them. That is what we call the 'tail' of a comet.
Venus is a planet, not a comet, so it does not have a tail.
It is a comet.
No. It is a comet. It is too small to be a planet.
That would be Pluto -- and it is not a planet, it is indeed a comet.
It is not a planet, and it is not a comet.
You usually get a crater, with surrounding damage.
A comet does. It hits the planet and then basically just fries the surface.-Mountainmmangeetar
No. It is a comet. It is too small to be a planet.
A comet does. It hits the planet and then basically just fries the surface.-Mountainmmangeetar
Depends on how big the comet is, where the comet hits, and what religious beliefs you have.
Neither. It is considered a dwarf planet. It is much larger than a comet.
The planet Jupiter was hit by a number of fragments of the Comet Shoemaker-Levy9.
When it is from very far away, nothing. But when a comet approaches the inner Solar System,solar radiation causes the volatile materials within the comet to vaporize and stream out of the nucleus, carrying dust away with them. That is what we call the 'tail' of a comet.