300P/Catalina

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Discoverydate6 May 2005
P/2005 JQ5, P/2014 G2
Epoch6 April 2023[2]
300P/Catalina
Discovery
Discovery siteCatalina Sky Survey[1]
Discovery date6 May 2005
Designations
P/2005 JQ5, P/2014 G2
Orbital characteristics
Epoch6 April 2023[2]
Observation arc13.6 years
Aphelion4.565 AU (Q)
Perihelion0.83207 AU (q)
Semi-major axis2.6985 AU (a)
Eccentricity0.69165
Orbital period4.43 years
Inclination5.6740°
Last perihelion11 April 2023[2]
Next perihelion13 September 2027[3]
Earth MOID0.0245 AU (3.67 million km)[4]
Physical characteristics
Dimensions1.4±0.1 km[5]
0.033[5]

300P/Catalina is a periodic, near-Earth comet in the Solar System with an orbital period of 4.4 years. It is the second comet ever listed on the Sentry Risk Table.[6] At 1.4 km (0.87 mi) in diameter,[5] it is one of the largest objects ever listed on the Sentry Risk Table.

It was discovered on 6 May 2005 as 2005 JQ5,[1] and listed on the Sentry Risk Table with five virtual impactors starting in 2041.[7] On 17 May 2005 it was designated as comet P/2005 JQ5 (Catalina).[8] It was removed from the Sentry Risk Table on 7 June 2005. It was observed by Arecibo Observatory on 12 June 2005.

300P/Catalina makes close approaches to Earth and has an Earth-MOID of 0.0245 AU (3,670,000 km; 2,280,000 mi).[4] On 8 June 2036 the comet will pass 0.0536 AU (8,020,000 km; 4,980,000 mi) from Earth.[4]

Meteor shower

References

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