Comet nucleus

/ˈkɒmɪt ˈnjuːkliəs/ noun

Definition

The solid, icy core of a comet, typically a few kilometers across, composed of frozen gases, rock, and dust. When heated by the Sun, the nucleus sublimates and creates the comet's visible coma and tail.

Etymology

From Latin 'cometa' meaning 'long-haired star' and 'nucleus' meaning 'kernel' or 'core'. The term evolved as astronomers realized comets had solid centers rather than being purely gaseous phenomena, with nucleus adopted in the 19th century to describe the central body.

Kelly Says

A comet nucleus is essentially a 'dirty snowball' that's darker than charcoal! Most nuclei reflect only 3-5% of sunlight, making them among the darkest objects in the solar system - darker than asphalt or coal.

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