Away from the Sun.
No, a comet's tail always faces away from the sun/
Comets have tails due to the sublimation of ice and other volatile materials when they approach the Sun, which creates a cloud of gas and dust around the nucleus. This material is then pushed away from the comet by solar radiation and solar wind, resulting in a tail. The tails always point away from the Sun because the solar wind and radiation pressure exert a force that pushes the particles outward, regardless of the comet's direction of travel. Therefore, no matter the orientation of the comet's orbit, its tail will always trail behind it in the direction opposite to the Sun.
Away from the Sun. The tails is caused by the solar wind.
Two things: 1. Comet tails do not follow along behind the comet. Comet tails always point away from the Sun. 2. Comets are not rocky, they are icy.
What DO comet tails originate from? They are formed when the sun causes gas and dust to leave the comet, and are then swept away by solar winds. This is why that no matter which direction a comet is traveling, it's tail is always pointed awY from the sun.
A comet is comprised mostly of ice. The tail of the comet is caused by cosmic winds, from our sun, blasting particles off the comet's surface, the tail does NOT point in the opposite direction of travel, as one might expect, but points directly away from the source of the solar winds. That's why a comets tail, (from our perspective) may be traveling in a certain direction but have it's tail pointing in the SAME direction.
The ion tail of a comet always points directly away from the sun due to the solar wind pushing charged particles emitted by the comet.
A comet tail is a stream of gas and dust that is released from the nucleus of a comet as it approaches the Sun. The tail is formed when solar radiation and the solar wind cause the comet's ices to sublimate, creating a glowing envelope of gas and particles. Comets typically have two types of tails: a dust tail, which is curved and made of small particles, and an ion tail, which is straight and composed of charged gas. The tails always point away from the Sun, regardless of the direction of the comet's travel.
Both of the comet tails are pushed away by the light and solar wind that is always streaming out of the Sun. This means the tails always point away from the Sun. The dust tail may curve a bit, but the plasma tail points directly away, so that the two tails may seem to form a "V".
The sun ejects solar winds which move much faster than any comet. This causes a stream of material (the tail) to point away from the Sun, irrespective of the direction the comet is travelling. The Sun's radiation may also have an effect. (Source: Wikipedia)Bad definition!
No. Comets tails always point away from the sun. I believe the are a result of the heat and solar winds projected out from the sun which strip material off from the comet as it travels through space.
Only by accident. A comet's tail will point away from the sun.