Personally, I 'm not sure Uranus could handle it.
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Absolutely.
The mass of Uranus is 86,849,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilograms.
The mass of Halley's comet is 220,000,000,000,000 kilograms.
That means that Uranus is 394,768,181,818 times (almost 395 billion times) more massive than Halley's comet.
You would be more affected by a housefly flying into your chest, than Uranus would be affected by being hit by Halley's comet.
Uranus could take a direct hit from Halley's comet, and not even feel it.
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The mass of Uranus is 86,849,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilograms.
The mass of Halley's comet is 220,000,000,000,000 kilograms.
That means that Uranus is 394,768,181,818 times (almost 395 billion times) more massive than Halley's comet.
You would be more affected by a housefly flying into your chest, than Uranus would be affected by being hit by Halley's comet.
Uranus could take a direct hit from Halley's comet, and not even feel it.
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No. Although Halley's Comet travels out to the _distance_ of Uranus, its orbit is in a different plane than that of Uranus, so the two orbits never ever come close to intersecting.
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No, Uranus has enough mass that Halley might gets it's orbit changed.
(You get an F for effort in trying to make another infantile bathroom joke.)
(You get an F for effort in trying to make another infantile bathroom joke.)
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No, unless Halleys Comet was on direct route with Uranus
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Yes, in a few million years..