Comet C1847 T1, "Maria Mitchell's Comet", was on a hyperbolic trajectory and is not expected to return to the inner solar system.
No. Halley's Comet barely gets past the orbit of Neptune, and not by much. It is well short of reaching into the Kuiper Belt.
Not in the near future but it is possible as she didn't die meaning she can return.
There are currently no plans for him to return.
Halley's Comet is a short-period comet; we can predict that it will return to the inner solar system within our lifetimes, and several times in recent history. Most other comets are either long-period and will not return for centuries, or will never again be visible. Sometimes it is very bright; sometimes it is a "fizzle". It is this element of reassuringly-predictable repeating mystery that makes it noteworthy.
yes
Halley's Comet
as far as i am aware it is haley's comet
g comet
Edmund Halley didn't discover the comet, he predicted when it would return. Up to his time no-one had been able to say when a comet would appear. In 1705, using Newtons laws of gravity, he was able to calculate the effects on a comet of the gravity of planets like Jupiter and Saturn; this allowed him to identify comets recorded in 1682, 1607, and 1531 as the same comet. He then calculated it appeared every 76 years and predicted its return in 1758. Halley himself didn't live to see it, but it turned up right on time, was given his name, and has been Halley's comet ever since.
YES, his name was William (Billy) Mitchell
Cam Mitchell is the biggest lad that has ever walked the planet.
yea and we will die
Yes, "Sozin's Comet" will be shown on Nick again.
Halley's Comet is unlikely to ever pose a hazard to the Earth. As such, it has no ecological significance.
A Comet is a body in perpetual orbit. A Meteorite is a body which enters the Earth's atmosphere. It is unlikely that Halley's Comet will ever crash into the Earth.
There is no possible way of smelling a comet without either a) it crashing to earth and it killing everyone or b) you landing on a comet in your lifetime to "sniff" it. so the answer is unknown because no one ever smelled a comet
I don't think so