20D/Westphal

Lost comet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

20D/Westphal was a periodic comet with an orbital period of 61 years. It fits the classical definition of a Halley-type comet (20 years < period < 200 years).[4] The comet appeared to disintegrate during the 1913 apparition and has not been observed in 112 years.[5][1]

DiscoverydateJuly 24, 1852
21P/1852 O1; 1852 IV;
21P/1913 S1; 1913 VI;
1913d
Epoch1913-11-09 (JD 2420080.5)
Quick facts Discovery, Discovered by ...
20D/Westphal
Discovery
Discovered byJ. G. Westphal
Discovery dateJuly 24, 1852
Designations
21P/1852 O1; 1852 IV;
21P/1913 S1; 1913 VI;
1913d
Orbital characteristics
Epoch1913-11-09 (JD 2420080.5)
Observation arc61 years
(Not observed in 112 years)[1]
Aphelion30.030 AU
Perihelion1.2540 AU
Semi-major axis15.642 AU
Eccentricity0.9198
Orbital period61.87 yr
Inclination40.890°
Last perihelionJanuary 3, 1976?[2] (unobserved)
Next perihelionMay 4, 2038?[3][2]
(lost since 1913)
Close

The comet was originally discovered by the German astronomer J. G. Westphal (Göttingen, Germany) on July 24, 1852. It was independently discovered by the American astronomer Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters (Constantinople) on August 9. The comet exhibited many flunctuations in intristic brightness and reached an apparent magnitude of around 4 while a dust tail was also observed.[5] It was last observed about 120 days after perihelion.[5]

The comet was recovered on September 27, 1913, by Pablo T. Delavan (La Plata Astronomical Observatory), about 60 days before perihelion; however, the comet faded as it approached the Sun, losing its central condensation and the nucleus becoming elongated.[5] The plates of the comet indicate that the disintegration began on October 1, when the comet was reported to be visible with the naked eye using averted vision.[5] It was last observed on November 26, 1913. It was predicted to return in 1976[2] but was never observed, and is now considered a lost comet.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI