Yes. It has happened countless times.
The asteroid 2020 AV2 has the closest perihelion (closest approach to the sun) of any known asteroid, coming within about 6.61 million kilometers of the sun. This asteroid has an elliptical orbit that takes it very close to the sun before swinging out into the outer solar system.
There is no definitive evidence of an asteroid hitting Uranus. However, the planet's moons may have been impacted by asteroids in the past, as seen by the presence of impact craters on their surfaces.
An asteroid will have a larger acceleration when it is nearest to the sun due to the stronger gravitational force exerted by the sun compared to the earth. This acceleration causes the asteroid to move faster when it is closest to the sun.
No, the Big Bang was not an asteroid. The Big Bang theory is the scientific explanation for the origin of the universe, proposing that it began as a singularity and has been expanding ever since. An asteroid is a rocky object in space that orbits the Sun, and is not related to the concept of the Big Bang.
Uranus is located outside the asteroid belt, further away from the Sun than the asteroid belt. It is the seventh planet from the Sun in our solar system.
yes! it depend to gravitational pull and the weight of an asteroid
Almost certainly.
It would depend entirely on how far away the asteroid was from the sun. Furthermore, which sun are you referring to? There are many suns in the solar system.
If an asteroid hit the sun, it would be vaporized instantly due to the extreme temperatures and gravitational forces of the sun. The impact would likely have no significant effect on the sun's overall structure or behavior.
YES IT HAS YES IT HAS YES IT HAS YES IT HAS
No it is not likely.
The asteroid 2020 AV2 has the closest perihelion (closest approach to the sun) of any known asteroid, coming within about 6.61 million kilometers of the sun. This asteroid has an elliptical orbit that takes it very close to the sun before swinging out into the outer solar system.
There is no definitive evidence of an asteroid hitting Uranus. However, the planet's moons may have been impacted by asteroids in the past, as seen by the presence of impact craters on their surfaces.
The earth will keep revolving around the sun until the sun dies out or earth is hit by a really big asteroid and knocks it out if its orbit.
no it was not an asteroid that hit the earth, it was kevins big mouth
An asteroid will have a larger acceleration when it is nearest to the sun due to the stronger gravitational force exerted by the sun compared to the earth. This acceleration causes the asteroid to move faster when it is closest to the sun.
Perhaps in the event of a very large asteroid impact, but other than that, no.