AstronomySolar SystemEasy

Comet

Also known as:Dirty Snowball (informal)Icy Dirtball (informal)

A comet is an icy small Solar System body that, when passing close to the Sun, warms up and begins to release gases and dust in a process called outgassing, producing a visible atmosphere (coma) and sometimes a bright tail that can extend millions of kilometres into space. Comets originate from two main regions: the Kuiper Belt (short-period comets) and the Oort Cloud (long-period comets). They are time capsules from the early Solar System, composed of frozen water, carbon dioxide, methane, and dust.

Notable Comets and Their Properties

CometOrbital PeriodOriginLast Perihelion
Halley's Comet75–76 yearsKuiper Belt1986
Comet Hale-Bopp~2,520 yearsOort Cloud1997
Comet Lovejoy (C/2014 Q2)~11,500 yearsOort Cloud2015
Shoemaker–Levy 9None (crashed)Captured by Jupiter1994
Comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko6.45 yearsKuiper Belt2015

Interactive Tools

NASA Comet Page

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JPL Comet Orbit Viewer

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WolframAlpha Comet Data

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Comet Hale-Bopp photographed in 1997 showing its bright dust and ion tails

Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Related Terms

From Latin "cometa" and Greek "kometes" (long-haired), from "kome" (hair of the head). Ancient Greeks and Romans described comets as "hairy stars" due to their bright tails. The term was used by Aristotle and became standard in astronomical literature.

cometsolar-systemicy-bodyoort-cloudkuiper-belttail