no
They come from the outer reaches of space.
No, Haley's Comet is not part of the Oort Cloud. It is a periodic comet that belongs to the Jupiter family of comets, originating from the Kuiper Belt. The Oort Cloud is a theoretical region of space much farther out in the solar system than where Halley's Comet originates.
The Oort cloud is a long way past Pluto, so Pluto is much nearer to us and the Sun.
There are some comets near Pluto, amongst the bodies in the "Kuiper Belt". However, I think the answer to this question is the "Oort cloud" of comets, far beyond the orbit of Pluto.
The Oort Cloud of comets.
The cloud of frozen comets that surrounds Pluto is called the Kuiper Belt.
It is the Oort cloud
If the orbit of a comet is 5000 times the distance between Pluto and the Sun, it would be in the Oort Cloud region. The Oort Cloud is a theoretical sphere of icy bodies that surrounds the solar system beyond the Kuiper Belt, and it is where long-period comets are believed to originate from.
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 depends on the table.
Pluto, although it is considered a dwarf planet.
They get pulled out by stars that are outside the the cloud. But the sun may pull a comet but that is rare