Comet Arend–Roland

Comet Arend–Roland was discovered on November 8, 1956, by Belgian astronomers Sylvain Arend and Georges Roland on photographic plates. As the eighth comet found in 1956, it was named Arend–Roland 1956h after its discoverers. Because it was the third comet to pass through perihelion during 1957, it was then renamed 1957 III. Finally, it received the standard IAU designation C/1956 R1 (Arend–Roland), with the "C/" indicating that it was a non-periodic comet and the "R1" showing that it was the first comet reported as discovered in the half-month designated by "R". The last is equivalent to the period September 1–15.

C/1956 R1 (Arend–Roland)
Comet Arend-Roland on April 27 by Palomar Observatory
Discovery
Discovered bySylvain Arend,
Georges Roland
Discovery date1956
Designations
Alternative designations
1957 III, 1956h, C/1956 R1
Orbital characteristics
Epoch2435920.5 (March 23, 1957)
Orbit typeOort cloud / Hyperbolic trajectory
Perihelion0.31604 AU
Eccentricity1.00024
1.000199 (epoch 1977+)
Orbital periodN/A
Inclination119.94°
Last perihelionApril 8, 1957
Next perihelionejection
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.