Imagine you're playing with a toy car. A meteoroid is like the toy car still in your hand, it's just hanging out in space, not moving yet. When you roll it across the floor, that’s like a meteor: it’s zooming through the air, visible to everyone watching from below. So, the difference between a meteoroid and a meteor is simple: one is still in space, and the other is lighting up the sky as it falls.
Examples
- A meteoroid is like a pebble you throw; when it becomes bright as it travels through the air, it turns into a meteor.
- Meteoroids are little rocks still in space, but when they light up the sky while falling, those are meteors.
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See also
- What Is the Difference Between a Meteor and a Comet?
- What Is a Lunar Eclipse Exactly?
- What Is the Point of a Lunar Eclipse?
- What Makes a ‘Solar Eclipse’ Different from a ‘Lunar Eclipse’?
- What Is the Difference Between a Comet and a Meteor?