answersLogoWhite

0

Are comet sometimes called dry snowballs?

Updated: 8/16/2019
User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

Best Answer

no they are called dirty snowballs because they are rocky and made out of ice

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Are comet sometimes called dry snowballs?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What services does Comet Cleaners offer?

Comet Cleaners offers dry cleaning and laundry services, whether the order is commercial or personal. Comet Cleaners is a certified environmental dry cleaner.


Is comet ice H2O?

Comet ice is a mix of water ice (H2O) and dry ice (CO2).


What is a river that never get dry called?

"River." You only need a special word if it does sometimes dry up.


What is the tail of comet made of?

rock, ice and gas!!


What is a dry gulch called?

A dry gulch is the act of severely injuring or killing someone by ambush. It is sometimes referred to as a sneak attack.


Why is southwest and central asia sometimes called the dry world?

Because of all the deserts there is


What is chuara or dry dates called in English?

Chuara or Chuaara is dry palm date, with dry, hardened skin, unlike the ripe chuaras that you get in supermarkets. Mostly available from Indian grocers. It is sometimes called Kharik.


Can you make snow balls from the snow in Antarctica?

You could not make snowballs from ice of any kind ... or not good snowballs anyway.


Facts about Florida's climate?

There are two seasons, the wet which is sometimes also called the hurricane season and the dry.


Why is central Asia sometimes called the dry world?

Because of all the deserts in Central and Southwest Asia.


What is the tail made of?

Gases vented from the comet, particularly carbon dioxide (from "dry ice") and water vapor.


What is a special dry warm wind that blows from the rocky mountains down into the valleys below called?

These winds are called the Santa Ana winds and they are very dry. They are often associated with fanning wildfires and are sometimes called devil winds.