It is possible, but not likely. Meteors have relatively small masses, without a large gravity well. They tend to lose them because they are in motion.
Communications satellites are used to track meteors to warn us if a meteor will hit Earth.
Meteors come in all sizes, from grains of sand to the size of a house; but I think it's safe to say thatmost meteors are smaller than artificial satellites.
All sorts of things. The Sun, the Moon, planets, asteroids, meteors, galaxies, nebulas, satellites and other things.
Planets with their moons and/or rings, meteors, asteroids, and man-made satellites orbit our Sun, to our current knowledge.
Asteroids, meteors, planetesimals (Like Pluto), natural satellites (moons), and dust are part of the Solar system that are not planets.
Basically absence... also comets, meteors, asteroids, planets, moons, satellites, shuttles and space stations, planets and moons.
That's a pretty wide open question. They may be satellites, or they may be meteors, but from this description it sounds like they are fireflies.
In the solar system, we have a star, planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, comets, meteors, and human debris. (such as old satellites, probes, etc.)
Dark matter, dark energy, nebulae, stars, black holes, planets, comets, asteroids, meteors, satellites, supernovas etc. make up an elliptical galaxy.
UFOs are merely unidentified objects that fly or appear to do so. They may be weather balloons, meteors, satellites or other objects. Their speed is dependant on what they are. What they are not is alien space craft.
Yes. A solar system consists of a sun or star with its satellites. (It can be 2 or 3 stars.) Its satellites are its planets, asteroids, meteors, comets, clouds, and other stuff in orbit around it. A galaxy consists of many solar systems. The Milky Way is a galaxy.
The moving bright lights may be aircraft, satellites, or meteors. The bright points that are not stars or planets may also be galaxies, asteroids, comets, or the moons of planets.