2km/h
It's unclear what you mean by "hades comet." If you are referring to a comet named Hades, there is no specific comet with that name. If you meant Halley's Comet, it will next be visible from Earth in 2061.
Yes. Comets have highly elliptical orbits. They move fastest when they are nearest the sun and slowest when they are farthest away.
the speed of a comet and the rotation is far too fast for a spacecraft to land
The path of a comet around the sun would depend on its mass, speed, and trajectory. It a comet enters the sun's gravitational field at the correct trajectory and speed, it would fall into a roughly circular orbit.
In short, the reason of this is the speed they are going, this creates an afterburn effect which heats up the comet therefore creating a 5000 degree tail
It's unclear what you mean by "hades comet." If you are referring to a comet named Hades, there is no specific comet with that name. If you meant Halley's Comet, it will next be visible from Earth in 2061.
The maximum speed of the 1962 Mercury Comet is 81 mph.
It's 2395 mph.
depends on its mass and speed
Yes. Comets have highly elliptical orbits. They move fastest when they are nearest the sun and slowest when they are farthest away.
250hp at 4400 rpm is the power of the mercury comet s-22 1963 engine and its maximum speed is 75 mph.
the speed of a comet and the rotation is far too fast for a spacecraft to land
The maximum speed of mercury comet S-22 automatic 6cyl 101HP 1962 is 90 miles per hour.
The maximum speed of Mercury Comet S-22 automatic 6cyl 101HP 1962 was 124 km per hour.
The path of a comet around the sun would depend on its mass, speed, and trajectory. It a comet enters the sun's gravitational field at the correct trajectory and speed, it would fall into a roughly circular orbit.
Hard. If you want more specific than that, you're going to need to know about the mass and speed of the comet.
In short, the reason of this is the speed they are going, this creates an afterburn effect which heats up the comet therefore creating a 5000 degree tail