No. The comet will gradually evaporate, every time it comes near enough to the Sun.
Comets do not always maintain the same mass. As a comet travels through the solar system, it can lose mass due to the sublimation of its icy nucleus as it gets closer to the sun. This loss of mass can result in changes to the comet's appearance and behavior.
Comets are frozen collections of ice,dust and gases which moves around the Sun.
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.
No, a comet's tail always faces away from the sun/
The tail of a comet always points away from the Sun, no matter which direction the comet is moving. This is because the Sun heats the comet up and blasts away the 'dirty ice' it's composed of, creating a tail that streams away from the Sun.This means that a comet can actually be travelling such that it's tail is ahead of it.
Comets do not always maintain the same mass. As a comet travels through the solar system, it can lose mass due to the sublimation of its icy nucleus as it gets closer to the sun. This loss of mass can result in changes to the comet's appearance and behavior.
No, they revolve in the universe, so not possible... with same force and gravity. I think it can't be same.
Comets are frozen collections of ice,dust and gases which moves around the Sun.
No
it might be the brightness of the comet.
yes
tae
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.
No, a comet's tail always faces away from the sun/
Solar wind makes a comet's tail always point away from the Sun.
The tail of a comet always points away from the Sun, no matter which direction the comet is moving. This is because the Sun heats the comet up and blasts away the 'dirty ice' it's composed of, creating a tail that streams away from the Sun.This means that a comet can actually be travelling such that it's tail is ahead of it.
Yes, a comet's tail always points away from the sun due to the solar wind. As the comet travels in its orbit, the pressure of the solar wind pushes the gas and dust in the tail away from the sun, creating the iconic tail that points in the opposite direction of the comet's movement.