20D/Westphal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Discovery | |
---|---|
Discovered by: | J. G. Westphal |
Discovery date: | July 24, 1852 |
Alternate designations: | 1852 O1; 1852 IV; 1913 S1; 1913 VI; 1913d |
Orbital characteristics A | |
Epoch: | 1999-05-02 (JD 2451300.5) |
Aphelion distance: | 30.192 AU |
Perihelion distance: | 1.2322 AU |
Semi-major axis: | 15.712 AU |
Eccentricity: | 0.9216 |
Orbital period: | 62.280 a |
Inclination: | 41.033° |
Last perihelion: | January 3, 1976 (unobserved) |
Next perihelion (predicted): | May 4, 2038 |
20D/Westphal (also known as D/Westphal 1) is a periodic comet in our solar system, originally discovered by the German astronomer J. G. Westphal (Göttingen, Germany) on July 24, 1852.
It was independently discovered by the American astronomer Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters (Constantinople) on August 9.
The comet was last seen between September 27 and November 26, 1913, first by Pablo T. Delavan (La Plata Astronomical Observatory) and then others. It was predicted to return in 1976 but was never observed, and is now considered lost.
[edit] External links
- http://www9.ocn.ne.jp/~comet/pcmtn/0020d.htm
- 20D at Kronk's Cometography
- http://www.ipac.caltech.edu/2mass/releases/allsky/doc/ancillary/all.comet.tbl.html (orbital elements)
Comets | ||
---|---|---|
Previous periodic comet | 20D/Westphal | Next periodic comet |
List of periodic comets |