69P/Taylor

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69P/Taylor
Discovery
Discovered by: Clement J. Taylor
Discovery date: November 24, 1915
Alternate designations: 1915 W1, 1976 X1
Orbital characteristics A
Epoch: November 11, 2004
Perihelion distance: 1.94 AU
Semi-major axis: 3.64 AU
Eccentricity: 0.467
Orbital period: 6.953 a
Inclination: 20.56°
Last perihelion: November 30, 2004
Next perihelion (predicted): July 17, 2011

Comet Taylor, is a periodic comet in the solar system, first discovered by Clement J. Taylor (Capetown, South Africa) on November 24, 1915.

George van Biesbroeck and E. E. Barnard (Yerkes Observatory, Wisconsin, USA) observed that the comet was split into two distinct nucleus, but this was not seen after March 16.

The comet was predicted to return in 1922, but was lost.

In 1928 the discovery of Comet Reinmuth 1 was originally assumed to be Comet Taylor, and again in 1951 the same assumption was made with Comet Arend-Rigaux.

The 1976 return was predicted by N. A. Belyaev and V. V. Emel'yanenko and on January 25, 1977, Charles Kowal (Palomar Observatory, California, USA) found images on photographic plates for December 13, 1976.

The comet was recovered for the returns in 1984 and 1990, and in 1998 was observed as magnitude 12 when it passed close by Earth.

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