If they get close enough to the Sun - which is when they are best visible - the water will gradually evaporate; the comet will disintegrate within a very short time (perhaps a few thousand years).
No. Comets orbit the sun.
comets orbit the sun
Comets don't orbit a planet, they orbit the sun.
No. Comets orbit the sun. Many asteroids orbit the sun in between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
Yes, some comets have been observed to orbit Jupiter. These comets can either be captured by Jupiter's gravity and become temporary moons, or have their orbits altered by Jupiter's gravitational pull.
Comets go around the Sun in a highly elliptical orbit.
no only comets.
No. Comets are not moons as they orbit the sun, not planets.
They both orbit the sun.
False. While most comets orbit the Sun in the same direction as the planets (counterclockwise when viewed from above Earth's North Pole), there are exceptions. Some comets have retrograde orbits, meaning they orbit in the opposite direction of the planets.
The sun.
the asteroid belt, the kuiper belt, and the oort cloud.