Yes. All the stars we see in the night sky are well beyond the Oort cloud.
The Oort cloud.However, technically the Oort cloud IS part of our Solar System.See related link for more information.
That is the Oort Cloud.That is the Oort Cloud.That is the Oort Cloud.That is the Oort Cloud.
the oort cloud is mostly black
Oort cloud
No it does not. The Oort cloud is not a planet. It is a sphere of comets around our solar system.
There are no know belts beyond the Kuiper belt, but there is the hypothetical Oort cloud. See related question
No. The Oort cloud is way beyond the orbit of Saturn. It's where many of the comets come from.
The Oort cloud.However, technically the Oort cloud IS part of our Solar System.See related link for more information.
No. Earth is part of the inner solar system. The Oort cloud, if it exists, lies beyond the orbits of all the planets.
The asteroid belt is in between the orbit or Mars and Jupiter. The Oort cloud is beyond the orbit of Neptune.
No
a spherical cloud of cometary nuclei far beyond the Kuiper Belt
commet
Comets are believed to have originated from asteroids in a sort of 'cloud', called the 'Oort Cloud'. It is thought all comets come from the Oort Cloud, which is a cloud of asteroids beyond the Kuiper Belt beyond Neptune. When one asteroid is knocked off from its orbit from the Oort Cloud, it makes really long trips around the Sun, which is why it becomes a comet. All of the asteroids in the Oort Cloud have some type of ice on them, since they are so far away from the sun that everything in the Oort Cloud seems to freeze.
That is the Oort Cloud.That is the Oort Cloud.That is the Oort Cloud.That is the Oort Cloud.
the oort cloud is mostly black
The outer Oort cloud. (The inner Oort cloud is believed to be disk-shaped.)