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  2. Asteroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroid

    Traditionally, small bodies orbiting the Sun were classified as comets, asteroids, or meteoroids, with anything smaller than one meter across being called a meteoroid. The term asteroid, never officially defined, [11] can be informally used to mean "an irregularly shaped rocky body orbiting the Sun that does not qualify as a planet or a dwarf ...

  3. Antimatter comet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antimatter_comet

    Antimatter comets and antimatter meteoroids are hypothetical comets and meteoroids composed solely of antimatter instead of ordinary matter.Although never actually observed, and unlikely to exist anywhere within the Milky Way, they have been hypothesized to exist, and their existence, on the presumption that hypothesis is correct, has been put forward as one possible explanation for various ...

  4. Impact events in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_events_in_fiction

    Impact events have been a recurring theme in fiction since the 1800s. [1] The earliest such stories tended to depict impacts by comets, [a] though other objects such as asteroids and meteoroids became more common in the 1900s. [2]

  5. Observational history of comets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Observational_history_of_comets

    Over the period 1864–1866 the Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli computed the orbit of the Perseid meteors, and based on orbital similarities, correctly hypothesized that the Perseids were fragments of Comet Swift–Tuttle. The link between comets and meteor showers was dramatically underscored when in 1872, a major meteor shower ...

  6. Meteoroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteoroid

    A meteorite is a portion of a meteoroid or asteroid that survives its passage through the atmosphere and hits the ground without being destroyed. [22] Meteorites are sometimes, but not always, found in association with hypervelocity impact craters; during energetic collisions, the entire impactor may be vaporized, leaving no meteorites.

  7. Solar System belts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_System_belts

    The asteroid and comet belts orbit the Sun from the inner rocky planets into outer parts of the Solar System, interstellar space. [16] [17] [18] An astronomical unit, or AU, is the distance from Earth to the Sun, which is approximately 150 billion meters (93 million miles). [19] Small Solar System objects are classified by their orbits: [20] [21]

  8. Tunguska event in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event_in_fiction

    While the event is generally held to have been caused by a meteor air burst, several alternative explanations have been proposed both in scientific circles and in fiction. [3] [4] [5] A popular one in fiction is that it was caused by an alien spaceship, possibly first put forth in Ed Earl Repp's 1930 short story "The Second Missile".

  9. Dust astronomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dust_astronomy

    At 1 AU meteoroids bigger than 1 mm in size are in a collisional steady state. The significant excess of smaller meteoroids is due to the input from comets. Models of the interplanetary dust environment of the Earth result in 80-90% of cometary dust vs. only 10-20% of asteroidal dust.