Discovery | |
---|---|
Discovered by | M. E. Van Ness[1] LONEOS telescope at Lowell Observatory |
Discovery date | 28 July 2001[2] |
Orbital characteristics | |
Epoch | 15 December 2001[3] (JD 2452258.5) |
Observation arc | 340 days |
Aphelion | 25.606 AU (Q) |
Perihelion | 0.99404 AU (q) |
Semi-major axis | 13.300 AU (a) |
Eccentricity | 0.92526 |
Orbital period | 48.51 yr |
Inclination | 80.245° |
Last perihelion | 2002-Mar-15[3] |
Next perihelion | 2050-Jun-07[4] |
Earth MOID | 0.3 AU (45 million km) |
Physical characteristics | |
Dimensions | 13.6 ± 1.0 km[3] |
C/2001 OG108 (LONEOS) is a Halley-type comet with an orbital period of 48.51 years.[3] It was discovered on 28 July 2001 by the LONEOS telescope at Lowell Observatory.[2] Of the short-period comets with known diameters and perihelion inside the orbit of Earth, C/2001 OG108 is the second largest after Comet Swift–Tuttle.[5]
Observations taken in January and February 2002 showed that the "asteroid" had developed a small amount of cometary activity as it approached perihelion.[1] It was subsequently reclassified as a comet.[1] The comet came to perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) on 15 March 2002.[3] It will come to aphelion in 2026 and the next perihelion passage is calculated to be on 7 June 2050.[4] On 23 March 2147 the comet will pass about 0.42 AU (63 million km; 160 LD) from Earth[3] with an uncertainty region of about ±2 million km.[6]
Date & time of closest approach |
Earth distance (AU) |
Sun distance (AU) |
Velocity wrt Earth (km/s) |
Velocity wrt Sun (km/s) |
Uncertainty region (3-sigma) |
Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2147-03-23 11:20 ± 13:38 | 0.42 AU (63 million km; 39 million mi; 160 LD) | 1.35 AU (202 million km; 125 million mi; 530 LD) | 40.3 | 35.3 | ± 2 million km | Horizons |
The comet has a rotational period of 2.38 ± 0.02 days (57.12 hr).[1][3]
In 2003, the comet was estimated to have a mean absolute V magnitude (H) of 13.05 ± 0.10, with an albedo of 0.03, giving an effective radius of 8.9 ± 0.7 km.[1] Using data from Fernandez (2004–2005) JPL lists the comet with an albedo of 0.05 and a diameter of 13.6 ± 1.0 km.[3]
This comet probably represents the transition between typical Halley-family/long-period comets and extinct comets.[1] Damocloids have been studied as possible extinct cometary candidates due to the similarity of their orbital parameters with those of Halley-family comets.[1]
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