Meteoroid
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
A meteoroid is a small piece of rock or metal that floats in outer space. These tiny space rocks are much smaller than asteroids. They can be as small as a grain of sand or as big as a basketball. Even smaller pieces are called micrometeoroids or space dust.
Many meteoroids come from comets or asteroids that have broken apart. Others are bits of rock thrown into space by collisions on planets like the Moon or Mars.
When a meteoroid enters Earth's atmosphere, it glows brightly and we call this a meteor. If many meteors appear together in the night sky, coming from the same point, we call this a meteor shower. If any part of a meteoroid makes it through the atmosphere and lands on the ground, it is called a meteorite.
Meteoroids
See also: Micrometeoroid
A meteoroid is a small piece of rock or metal that moves through space. It is smaller than an asteroid but bigger than a tiny speck of dust. Meteoroids can be as small as tiny grains or as big as a person.
Most meteoroids come from the area between the planets, called the asteroid belt, or from comets—big balls of ice and dust that orbit the Sun. When meteoroids enter Earth’s atmosphere, they heat up and glow. This creates what we call a shooting star or meteor. If any part of the meteoroid reaches the ground, it is called a meteorite.
Frequency
Every day, Earth is likely hit by a space rock about 40 cm (1 foot 4 inches) big. Once a year, something around 4 meters (13 feet) could strike, and every century, an object about 20 meters (66 feet) might hit us.
About 35 to 40 objects that are 1 meter (3 feet) or larger enter our atmosphere each year, which means roughly one every 10 days.
Scientists use a special formula to figure out how many impacts happen each year based on the size of the object. The formula helps them understand these space rocks better.
Meteorites
Main article: Meteorite
A meteorite is a piece of a space rock that falls through Earth's air and lands on the ground. Not all space rocks that hit Earth leave behind meteorites, because some turn into gas and disappear.
Space rocks can also crash into other places in our solar system. On places like the Moon or Mars, which don't have much air, these crashes leave behind marks called craters.
Impact craters
Main article: Impact crater
When space rocks crash into solid objects in space, like the Moon or Mars, they make craters. These craters are common on many of these objects. On Earth, some of these craters may disappear over time because of natural changes.
Gallery of meteorites
Two special rocks called tektites, made from Earth material thrown into the air by a space rock crash
A piece of the Esquel space rock
Willamette space rock, from Oregon, US
Space rock that fell in [Wisconsin](/wiki/Wisconsin) in 1868
[Marília](/wiki/Marília) space rock, a common type of space rock, which fell in Marília, Brazil (1971)
Children standing behind a copy of the Tucson space rock at the [Arizona Museum of Natural History](/wiki/Arizona_Museum_of_Natural_History)
Space rock with special patterns and [carbon](/wiki/Carbon) pieces from [Tindouf](/wiki/Tindouf), Algeria
Images
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Meteoroid, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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