Comet IRAS–Araki–Alcock

Comet IRAS–Araki–Alcock (formal designation C/1983 H1, formerly 1983 VII) is a long-period comet that, in 1983, made the closest known approach to Earth of any comet in 200 years, at a distance of about 0.0312 AU (4,670,000 km; 2,900,000 mi). The comet was named after its discoverers  the Infrared Astronomical Satellite and two amateur astronomers, George Alcock of the United Kingdom and Genichi Araki of Japan. Both men were schoolteachers by profession, although Alcock was retired. Alcock had made his discovery simply by observing through the window of his home, using binoculars. During the closest approach, the comet appeared as a circular cloud about the size of the full moon, having no discernible tail, and shining at a naked eye magnitude of 3–4. It swept across the sky at an angular speed of about 30 degrees per day. On May 11 the comet was detected on radar by Arecibo Observatory and Goldstone Solar System Radar making it the first comet detected by two different radar systems. A second detection was made by Goldstone on 14 May.

Comet IRAS–Araki–Alcock
11 May 1983 ~06:00 UT
Orbital characteristics
Epoch 13 May 1983 (JD 2445467.5)
Aphelion195.052477±0.42817 AU
Perihelion0.99134097 ± 2.876×10−7 AU
Semi-major axis
98.021909±0.21517 AU
Eccentricity0.9898865
Orbital period (sidereal)
970.49 years
Inclination73.2513669°
Earth MOID0.00583 AU (872000 km; 542000 mi)
Physical characteristics
Dimensions9.2 km in diameter
Albedo0.02
12.599

    It is a long-period comet, with an orbital period of about 970 years, and is the parent comet of the minor Eta Lyrid meteor shower. This shower's radiant lies between Vega and Cygnus and produces 1 or 2 meteors an hour in mid-May with a peak between 9 May and 11 May.

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.