It varies- it entirely depends upon the size of the comet, they are all different and there's no standard size for them. They can be as little as about 100 feet across, whilst the big ones can have a diameter of a couple of miles.
The nucleus is 5 Miles (8 Km) wide, and 9 Miles (15 Km) Long
The comet west is estimated to be about 37 miles in diameter.
Some other examples of comets include Comet Halley, Comet Hale-Bopp, and Comet Hyakutake. These comets are known for their brightness, size, and visibility from Earth.
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The generally accepted order would be Comet, Asteroid, Moon, Planet, Sun. However, there is considerable overlap in sizes among asteroids and moons. Some of the moons of Saturn are fairly small, and the moons of Mars are both smaller than the average asteroid.
A comet be able to be of sun size.
The comet's size changes depending on how close it is to the sun and the location. There's no real set size range.
The nucleus is 5 Miles (8 Km) wide, and 9 Miles (15 Km) Long
big
The comet west is estimated to be about 37 miles in diameter.
Halley's comet has a period of 76 years.
Depends on the comet. Size varies. But they are usually smaller.
Some other examples of comets include Comet Halley, Comet Hale-Bopp, and Comet Hyakutake. These comets are known for their brightness, size, and visibility from Earth.
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The weight of an average comet can vary widely depending on its size and composition. However, most comets are relatively small and have low mass compared to planets or moons, typically ranging from a few billion kilograms to a few trillion kilograms.
Each time a comet comes near the Sun, the dust and debris from a comet passing near the Sun are pushed out a LITTLE bit from the head of the comet, but MOST of the dust and rocks from the comet continue along in pretty much the same orbit as before. Over the centuries, the trail of dust and rocks spreads out along the orbit to fill in the entire orbital path. When the Earth's orbit crosses any part of the comet's orbit, we have "meteor showers". Most meteors are the size of a grain of sand, and the "average" meteor is about the size of a grain of rice; a meteor the size of a Golf ball is pretty big, and meteors like the one that exploded over Russia in March, 2013 are enormous..