Comets and asteroids are remnants from the formation of the solar system. Comets originate from the Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud and are icy bodies, while asteroids originate from the Main Asteroid Belt and are rocky fragments. Both have irregular shapes and sizes ranging from 1-100 km. Comets have highly elliptical orbits with periods of 75 years to millions of years, while asteroids have more rounded orbits with periods of 1-100 years. When a meteoroid from space enters the atmosphere, it becomes a meteor or "shooting star"; any fragments that reach the ground are called meteorites.
3. COMETS AND ASTEROIDS
• Comets and asteroids are referred to by
astronomers as Near-Earth Objects (NEO).
• Comets are icy bodies or objects while
asteroids are rocky fragments.
• Comets and asteroids are remnants from the
formation of our solar system 4.6 billion years
ago.
4. Comparison of some characteristics of
comets and asteroids
Characteristics Comet Asteroid
Origin Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud Main Asteroid Belt
Shape Varied/Irregular Varied/Irregular
Size range of diameter
(kilometer)
1-10 (nucleus only) 1-100 ++
Chemical composition Ice (frozen water); frozen gases
(ammonia, methane, and carbon
dioxide); other organic compounds
(carbon-containing compounds)
Silicates (olivine and
pyroxene), iron, nickel
Orbit Highly elliptical More rounded
Orbital period (years) 75 to 100,000++ 1-100
5. COMETS AND ASTEROIDS
• Comets and asteroids have irregular shapes
and varied sizes. They both reflect light from
the sun at varying amounts depending on the
size and composition.
• Silicates are minerals which contain the minerals
that contain the elements silicon, oxygen, and at
least one metal which is responsible for comets
and asteroids to be able to reflect light.
6. COMETS AND ASTEROIDS
• Comet and asteroid both orbit the Sun
• Comets usually come from the Oort Cloud
which is beyond our Solar System, and a few
from Kuiper Belt which is just beyond
Neptune’s orbit.
• Long-period comets come from the Oort
cloud, while short-period comets come from
Kuiper Belt.
7. Halley’s Comet
• The most famous comet of the 20th century.
• Only known short-period comet
• It takes 75-79 years for Comet Halley to orbit
the Sun
*Long-period comets take 200 to hundred millions of
years to complete their orbit around the Sun.
8. Asteroi
ds
• Asteroids originate from the Main Asteroid
Belt between Mars and Jupiter.
• This belt is theorized by scientists to be
remnants of a planet that did not completely
form.
9. Asteroi
ds
• The orbit of an asteroid is more rounded and
less elliptical than the orbit of a comet.
• The asteroid Ceres was discovered in 1801
by Guiseppe Piazzi; it is the largest asteroid.
10. Asteroi
ds
• Asteroids are made of rocks, ice, carbon,
silica and different metals.
• Asteroids are also called minor planets or
planetoids.
11. COMETS
• Comets come from regions of space very
far from the heat and radiaton of the sun.
• Comets are made of frozen matter while
asteroids are rocky fragments.
13. COMETS
• Comets are actually dark and invisible. When
a comet is near the sun, it becomes visible
because tails are formed
• When a comet is approaching the sun, its ion
tail is behind it but when it is moving away
from the sun, its ion tail goes ahead of it.
16. Metoroid/Meteor/Meteorite
• A meteoroid usually all burns up
when it enters Earth’s atmosphere.
• A meteor is a light phenomenon or a
streak of light that occurs when a
meteoroid burns up as it enters the
Earth’s atmosphere.
• When a fragment from the
meteoroid survives and makes it to
the ground, this space rock fragment
is now called a meteorite.
17. Metoroid/Meteor/Meteorite
• A meteor shower is a light
phenomenon caused by
fragments left by a comet
as they orbit the sun.
When the earth orbits the
sun and passes through
the comet fragments, a
streak of light is produced.
18. TYPES OF METEORITES:
Stony Meteorite
Stony meteorites, the
most common type of
meteorite, are generally
composed of approximately
75 – 90% silicon-based
minerals, 10 – 25% nickel-iron
alloy, and trace amounts of
iron sulfide.
19. TYPES OF METEORITES:
Stony-iron meteorite
Stony-iron meteorites contain
approximately even amounts of silicates
and nickel-iron alloy
20. TYPES OF METEORITES:
Iron meteorite
Most iron meteorites
likely originated in the cores of
large asteroids, and are
composed almost entirely of
nickel-iron alloy, which is also
a primary component of the
Earth's core.