Meteroids' can be very big or very small. There is no exact size of a meteroid.
No, a meteoroid is a small rocky or metallic body in outer space that does not have an atmosphere. It is typically smaller than an asteroid and can range in size from a grain of sand to a small rock.
Air heated to incandescence.
That would be a meteoroid. Meteoroids are smaller pieces of debris in space that can range in size from dust grains to small rocks. When a meteoroid enters Earth's atmosphere and burns up, it creates a meteor or shooting star.
Most meteors you see in the sky are about the size of a grain of sand or a pebble. They appear much larger due to the speed at which they enter Earth's atmosphere, which causes them to heat up and create a bright streak of light as they burn up.
From the size of a grain of sand, to about the size of a grain of rice. A meteor the size of e kernel of corn would be rare. Bigger ones do come along, but things the size of a baseball probably only hit the Earth once a week or so.
Nothing but if the pebble is raw it can have changes in size the longer it stays in a liquid.
The smallest type of rock is a pebble. A pebble can be made out of most rocks and is the size of a marble.
yes, but not always it depends on the size
Meteroid orbits are random. Much like a comet.
Yes
It is not necessarily any of these, as "pebble" describes a grain size and does not say anything about composition. In most cases, though, a pebble is a mixture.
4
6.4 centimeters in diameter.
Pebble larger than clay
A pebble is smaller than gravel. Pebbles are generally between 2-64 millimeters in size, while gravel typically ranges from 2 to 75 millimeters.
The weight of anything depends on what it's made of and how large it is. You'd have to weigh the individual pebble to be certain.
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