About the biggest object that we're fairly sure of was the "dinosaur killer" that hit near what is now Mexico about 65 million years ago. We don't believe it was a comet, but rather an asteroid, about 12 miles long. Pretty darned big! It killed off the dinosaurs and most large animals, and about half of all life on the Earth.
About 252 million years ago, at the end of the Permian period, something caused a mass extinction that killed off closer to 95% of all life on the Earth. We don't know the cause; some geologists believe a super-volcano, others believe a worldwide chain of earthquakes, and some people believe it may have been a very large asteroid or comet impact. Of course, a big enough asteroid would probably CAUSE worldwide earthquakes and volcanoes, so perhaps this is the logical explanation. But we cannot be sure. I'm not aware than anyone has calculated how large the impact might have been.
About 4.2 billion years ago, when the Sun and our solar system were still new, we believe that another planetary object perhaps as large as the planet Mars collided with the proto-Earth. This would have completely re-formed the resulting combined planet. We know that the Earth has a much larger iron core than other planets do, and we suspect that the reason is that the Earth's core was formed from TWO planets colliding. The debris blasted into space, we believe, coalesced in orbit and formed the Moon.
Eris is the largest discovered so far--at almost 2000 miles across it is bigger than Pluto.
Of course, Eris remains far enough away it would not develop a tail. For tails these icy bodies have to fall in closer than Jupiter.
Some of the craters were probably created by comets, rather than by big asteroids.
Hale-Bopp was about 60 miles in diameter. That is pretty big, in terms of things visible from earth.
http://home.comcast.net/~jimvb/2007/08/largest-comet-ever-discovered.html
its the comet of 1929 also known as comet sarabet.
it has a magnetude of -3 therefore considered to be the biggest ever observed
hope this helps :)
There have been some large ones in history, such as Comet Hale-Bopp, which was 60 miles in diameter. It was a brilliant comet, the biggest one in my lifetime that I have seen. However, it was clear across the Solar System. If it had been near us, like Comet Hyakutake in 1996 at 9 million miles, it would have been an incredible sight.
The asteroid Chiron is about the same size, and it has shown signs of developing a coma. If so, then Chiron is another comet. But it is also a straggler Kuiper Belt object (KBO), which makes one think of the other KBOs. They are icy worlds, and if one were placed in the inner solar system, the ices off the world would stream off to produce a comet. So does that mean that all KBOs are comets? Here we go with Pluto again. The International Astronomical Union has ruled that it is not a planet, but rather a KBO and a "dwarf planet". Could it really be a comet? If Pluto got into the inner Solar System, it would be one big whopper of a comet, perhaps. The same holds for Eris, too, and the other large KBOs. But this leads to the question: what is a comet anyway?
To me a comet is any body that produces a bright center and a faint to bright tail trailing it, and lasting at least an hour (to exclude meteors). The bodies that produce the traditional comets we observe are much like small asteroids or KBOs. They are solid bodies. The comets differ in that they have icy surfaces, unlike the rocky surfaces of Mars-Jupiter asteroids. So to me anything that is capable of producing such a brilliant tail in the sky is a comet. That makes Eris and Pluto comets. So is Eris the largest comet?
No. Recently Astronomy magazine reported an even larger comet. This one is larger than Jupiter. That's correct, larger than Jupiter. They reported that a large body, TrES-4, orbits the star GSC 02620-00648 in Hercules. This body is considerably bigger than Jupiter, maybe twice as big. But it is less massive. Bodies that are between 1 and 80 Jupiters in mass are all of about the same size, with the difference being their density. But this one is considerably larger. It must be a puffball of a planet, with gases on the surface that are heated up by the central star and blown away by the stellar wind, to produce an enormous tail. To me, TrES-4, although it is a gas-giant planet, is also a comet. A really huge comet! But is this the largest comet? No.
There is one much larger than that one, and this object has been known since the 1600s. It is a favorite with amateur astronomers. It is Mira, the wonderful variable star in Cetus. This star varies in magnitude from 2.5 (about the same as Phecda in the Big Dipper) to 10 (a faint dot in an 8-inch telescope), over an irregular period that averages 331 days. It has long been known to be a red giant star about 1.2 times as massive as the Sun, and as large as Mars' orbit. The maxima and minima have been studiously observed since the 1600s. Astronomers have discovered something new with Mira. It is producing a tail in ultraviolet light that makes it look like a comet. If it looks like a comet, then it is one. To me this star qualifies as a comet, as it consists of a bright object with a long tail behind it. The tail is certainly long. Instead of 100 million miles (typical of a Solar System comet), it is 13 light years long! The star is moving fast, and it is ejecting gas, which is forming this tail. So this is a comet, in a planetary system where the central star is itself a comet.
This certainly has to be the largest comet ever discovered.
This is not precisely known, because we cannot be certain of what an impactor is thousands of years after the fact. Some scientists believe that the object that struck Tunguska, Siberia in 1908 may have been a small comet. Other historical impactors may have been comets or asteroids; without observation and records, it's difficult to know.
See the link below for a list of some objects that have hit the Earth in the past.
yes many times actually in the past.
It is quite common for small meteors to hit the Earth. Larger impacts by an asteroid or comet are also possible but happen much less often.
A meteor is the name given to something that has hit the Earth. You may be referring to a comet, which orbits the Sun. In that case, it is just called a comet tail, nothing more.
There is Halley's comet, and a meteorite crater called Hoba Iron Meteorite. Does that help?
Sometimes they do; that's what a "meteor shower" is. The point is that all of the rocks and dust given off by a comet, and the head of the comet too, travel the way gravity and the light pressure of the Sun force them to. The head of the comet is freely falling towards the Sun. (if a comet gets close enough to a planet, the gravity of the planet becomes significant, and sometimes the comet will collide with the planet; look at Shoemaker-Levy 9, which hit Jupiter in 1994.) As the heat of the Sun begins to melt the ices of the comet, gas and dust escape from the comet. Because the gas molecules and dust particles are very light, the pressure of the Sun's light pushes them away from the comet; this forms the "tail" of the comet. Over the course of thousands of orbits, the gas and dust spreads out to fill in much of the orbit of the comet. Where the Earth's orbit intersects the comet's orbit, we see annual meteor showers.
Yes, comets pass by earth regularly and it has been hit by metorites regularly. If the Big Bang theory is correct, then an asteroid could be headed towards Earth just like our system was created
We don't currently know when a comet will hit planet Earth.
Comet Lulin will not hit the Earth; it won't even come especially close.
No, a comet will NOT hit earth in 2012.
Probably several times. It is assumed that a third of Earth water came from comets and it was a comet that hit the Earth 65 million years ago and caused the dinosaur extinction.
It is very likely that a comet has hit the earth in the distant past. It is possible that a comet striking the earth led to the extinction of the dinosaur.
yes
we cant survive a comet and besides they dont hit the earth
10,000km
Depends on how big the Comet is.
yea and we will die
maybe...
lol it causes damage such as creating some crater,,,,,,,,,,,, it is very rare 4 a comet to hit earth lmao