No. Planets do not have comets. They are not related to planets. They are just objects flying through space that we can see in the sky.
asteroids and comets!
Uranus has 47 moons. Uranus moons are comets or planets or space trash or asdroids or medeors.
Uranus and Neptune are the Ice Giants. Mars also has ice as too does Mercury and Earth.
Caroline Herschel was the first professionaal female astronomer. She assisted here brother William in the discovery of Uranus and the cataloguing of 1000s of nebulae and galaxies and discovered several comets of her own.
Everything that orbits the sun. Including mercury, venus, earth, mars, ceresin the asteroid belt, jupiter, saturn, uranus, neptune, pluto, comets, etc...
Not necessarily. Comets can rotate in either direction on their axis, some rotate counterclockwise while others rotate clockwise. The direction of rotation is determined by various factors such as the direction the comet formed or collisions it may have experienced.
The singular form is comet, the plural form is comets, the possessive plural is comets'. Example: The comets' paths will not cross.
Comets are Comets and Asteroids are Asteroids
comets
Comets
We did see a comet break up and hit Jupiter a few years ago. It made some little splashes, and then it was gone. We're pretty sure that the same thing must have happened to other planets, but if they leave any marks, we're not sure what the marks look like, so we don't know what's been hit. Aside from that, planets are not made of comets, so there's no such thing as comets 'in' a planet.
William Herschel initially thought that Uranus was a comet because of its rapid motion across the sky, which was similar to that of a comet. Later observations and calculations revealed that Uranus was actually a planet due to its consistent orbit and lack of a visible coma or tail characteristic of comets.