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18D/Perrine–Mrkos

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18D/Perrine–Mrkos
Discovery
Discovered byCharles Dillon Perrine & Antonín Mrkos
Discovery dateDecember 9, 1896
Designations
1896 X1; 1896 VII;
1896g; 1909 P1;
1909 III; 1909b;
1955 U1; 1955 VII;
1955i; 1962 I;
1961h; 1968 VIII;
1968h
Orbital characteristics
Epoch2002-09-03 (JD 2452520.5)
Aphelion5.8537 AU
Perihelion1.2872 AU
Semi-major axis3.5705 AU
Eccentricity0.6395
Orbital period6.75 a
Inclination17.864°
Last perihelion2017 Feb. 26?[1]
(unobserved)
Next perihelion≈2025-Jan-01?[1][2]
(Lost since 1969)[3]

18D/Perrine–Mrkos is a periodic comet in the Solar System, originally discovered by the American-Argentine astronomer Charles Dillon Perrine (Lick Observatory, California, United States) on December 9, 1896. For some time it was thought to be a fragment of Biela's Comet.[4]

It was considered lost after the 1909 appearance, but was rediscovered by the Czech astronomer Antonín Mrkos (Skalnate Pleso Observatory, Slovakia) on October 19, 1955, using ordinary binoculars, it was later confirmed as 18D by Leland E. Cunningham (Leuschner Observatory, University of California, Berkeley).

The comet was last observed during the 1968 perihelion passage when it passed 0.3144 AU (47,030,000 km; 29,230,000 mi) from the Earth.[5] The comet has not been observed during the following perihelion passages:[1]

  • 1975 Aug. 2
  • 1982 May 16
  • 1989 Feb. 28
  • 1995 Dec. 6 (apmag 19?)
  • 2002 Sept.10 (apmag 20?)
  • 2009 Apr. 17 (apmag 24?)
  • 2017 Feb. 26 (apmag 24?)

The next predicted perihelion passage would be on 2025-Jan-01[1][2] but the comet is currently considered lost as it has not been seen since Jan 1969.[3]

18D current position using Stellarium.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Seiichi Yoshida (2009-09-19). "18D/Perrine-Mrkos". Seiichi Yoshida's Comet Catalog. Retrieved 2012-02-22.
  2. ^ a b "Horizons Batch for 18D/Perrine-Mrkos (90000290) on 2025-Jan-01" (Perihelion occurs when rdot flips from negative to positive). JPL Horizons. Retrieved 2023-02-11. (JPL#J682/18 Soln.date: 2002-Feb-22)
  3. ^ a b "18D/Perrine–Mrkos Orbit". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
  4. ^ Kronk, Gary W. (2001–2005). "18D/Perrine-Mrkos". Archived from the original on 2001-04-05. Retrieved 2006-06-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)()
  5. ^ "JPL SBDB: 18D/Perrine-Mrkos" (1968-12-26 last obs). Archived from the original on 2020-11-14.
[edit]


Numbered comets
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