Science, asked by hardikjitendragoglan, 6 months ago

ill. What is a shooting star? Write in short about it.​

Answers

Answered by bhakti4616
0

Answer:

A shooting star is another name for a meteoroid that burns up as it passes through the Earth's atmosphere. ... When a meteoroid is larger, the streak in the sky is called a fireball or bolide. These can be bright, and leave a streak in the sky that can last for more than a minute

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer with Explanation:

Meteors are commonly called shooting stars. It is also called as falling star.

There are millions of such particles colliding with the atmosphere every day  But since you can only see them at night, and you can only look at a small part of the sky at once, when stargazing you can expect to see a shooting star every 10 to 15 minutes.

On any given night, depending on our luck, we can see between one and two shooting stars per hour; but on certain dates they occur much more frequently and many more can be seen: when this happens we call it a meteor shower.

The speed of a shooting star depends on how and when the meteor enters the Earth's atmosphere. On average, the speed of meteor ranges from 11/km/sec to 72 km/sec, which is 25,000 mph to 160,000 mph.

The streak of light in this remarkable photograph is a "shooting star," a tiny speck of space debris burning up as it enters Earth's atmosphere. To the naked eye, a shooting star appears as a fleeting flash of white light.

Meteor showers occur when dust or particles from asteroids or comets enter Earth's atmosphere at very high speed. When they hit the atmosphere, meteors rub against air particles and create friction, heating the meteors. The heat vaporizes most meteors, creating what we call shooting stars.

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