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A comet is the ball of mostly ice that moves around in outer space. It is similar to an asteroid. In Earth's solar system, the orbits of comets go farther than Pluto, the planet farthest from the Sun. Most are very far away from the Sun, but some come near enough to Earth for us to see at night. They have long "tails", because the Sun melts the ice. Sometimes people call am "dirty snowballs" or "shooting stars".

File:CometWest.gif
Comet West
Diagram of the comet's orbit
(click to make big)

The hard centre of the comet is the nucleus. It is one of the blackest things in the solar system. When light shone on Comet Halley's nucleus, only 4% of the light shone back to us.

Periodic comets visit us again and again. Non-periodic or single-apparition comets visit us only once.

People have seen some comets when ay broke into pieces: Comet Biela was one example. Another comet was seen when it hit the planet: Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 hit Jupiter in 1994. Some comets orbit (go around) together in groups, and astronomers think ay are broken pieces that used to be one object.

Some famous comets include:

See also

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The Solar System
 
Star: The Sun
Planets: MercuryVenusEarthMarsJupiterSaturnUranusNeptune
Dwarf planets: CeresPlutoEris
Small solar system body: Asteroid beltCometsMeteorsKuiper beltScattered discOort cloud
Other: Moon

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