I'm not exactly sure but I think it can be cause if a rock the size of a Basketball (a meteor) is falling through the atmosphere it burns up before hitting the ground so i think a Golf ball will.
A meteriod is a floating piece of rock in space. It becomes a meteor when it is flying through the atmosphere. The piece of rock that survives the trip through the atmosphere is called a meteorite.
Yes- but good luck in hitting anything while flying through the air.
All rocks, trash, and other things that are flying in a no gravitational area are prone to flying straight. If the object is flying near/close to Earth's atmosphere, the atmosphere will inhale the item and suck it into the Earth, due to our planets gravity. Have you ever seen a shooting star? Those are quite the exact same things as comets, and they're going through the atmosphere at lightspeed, and they burn up before they can hit the ground.
Gravity.
Yes. The atmosphere moves with the planet, and the plane will move with the atmosphere. The craft's own motion will move it through the air and across the globe, but the rotation of the earth still affects the craft.
stratosphere
to prevent you form flying out of the windscreen or hitting yourbody on to something
Hermione Granger, in an effort to learn as much as she could before their first flying lesson.
Yes, passengers flying within Europe may have to go through customs depending on the country they are traveling to and from. It is important to check the specific customs requirements of each country before traveling.
Depends which country you are flying out of but generally not, these are on a record for when your passport goes through customs before you fly
The web address of the Saving Our Flying Heritage Through A Flying Museum is: http://hsv-sofh.webs.com/
Comets are flying bits of rock that don't enter the earth's atmosphere and meteors are flying bits of iron stone or stony iron. Also meteors do enter the earth's atmosphere.