Meteor
Meteor,
in astronomy, small solid body
entering a planet's atmosphere from
outer space and raised to incandescence by the friction
resulting from its rapid motion.
Brilliant meteors, known as fireballs, occur singly
and generally consist of a luminous head, followed by a cometlike
train of light that may persist for several minutes; some,
called bolides, have been seen to explode with a sound like
thunder.
Fainter
meteors, called shooting or falling stars,
usually occur singly and sporadically. At intervals, however,
hundreds of such meteors occur simultaneously and appear to
emanate from a fixed point. These swarms are called meteor
showers and are named after the constellation in which
they seem to have their point of origin. Some appear annually
on the same days of each year and are called periodic showers;
others occur infrequently at varying intervals. The periods
of meteor showers generally coincide with those of certain
comets (see Comet). Most meteors
are dissipated in flight and fall to the earth as dust; a
meteor that reaches the surface of the earth or another planet
is called a meteorite.
"Meteor,"
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