Rocks, Rocky Iron, Iron, Dust, and/or Ice.
Rock, Ice, Dust
Comets and meteors are made of rocks and boulders same as on earth. But since they are in space for a long time, they might have some differences, little differences.
Meteors are made up of rocks and ice and dust from space where as shooting stars are falling stars.
Meteors are typically solid pieces of rock or metal that enter Earth's atmosphere and burn up due to friction, creating a bright streak of light. Some meteors may contain some ice, but the overall composition is more likely to be rock or metal. Dust and gas can also be present in meteors, but they are not the primary components.
Some meteors are made of ice because they originate from comets, which are composed of ice, dust, and rocky material. When a comet approaches the Sun, the heat causes the ice to vaporize, releasing gas and dust that can form a meteoroid. These icy meteoroids can then enter Earth's atmosphere, producing meteors made primarily of ice and other volatile compounds. Additionally, some asteroids may contain water ice, contributing to the icy composition of certain meteors.
This can vary a lot between different meteors; the main classification, if I remember correctly, is between "ice meteors" that are made up mainly of ice, and "rock meteors", out of rocky materials.
Halley's comet
the hole made by meteors craters
Rock, Ice, Dust
yes
Orion is somewhere in the sky at some time of night during roughly 9 months of the year. The best month to see it depends on what time you want to go out and look at it. If you're like most people who do their gazing between dinner and bed-time, then the best time to see Orion is in the Winter and early Spring.
3478
Comets and meteors are made of rocks and boulders same as on earth. But since they are in space for a long time, they might have some differences, little differences.
Meteors are made up of rocks and ice and dust from space where as shooting stars are falling stars.
stony stony iron and iron
stony stony iron and iron
Meteors are rocky in nature that are pieces broken off from asteroids or chunks of rock formed by cosmic dust clumping together.