50P/Arend

Jupiter-family comet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Comet Arend or 50P/Arend is a periodic comet in the Solar System which was discovered on October 4, 1951.[1] It was discovered by astronomer Sylvain Julien Victor Arend[1] at the Royal Observatory of Belgium located in the municipality of Uccle. The comet was illustrated at approximately a magnitude of 14 and also exhibited a nucleus within a coma 14 arc seconds across. It has been observed on its every subsequent apparition since discovery, with the most recent one occurred in 2024. The comet's next perihelion will be in the year 2032.[3]

Discoverydate4 October 1951[1]
P/1951 T1, P/1959 N1
  • 1951 X, 1959 V, 1967 VI
  • 1975 VI, 1983 VIII
  • 1991 VIII
Quick facts Discovery, Discovered by ...
50P/Arend
Comet 50P/Arend photographed by George van Biesbroeck on 4 November 1951
Discovery
Discovered bySylvian Arend
Discovery date4 October 1951[1]
Designations
P/1951 T1, P/1959 N1
  • 1951 X, 1959 V, 1967 VI
  • 1975 VI, 1983 VIII
  • 1991 VIII
Orbital characteristics
Epoch21 November 2025 (JD 2461000.5)
Aphelion6.252 AU
Perihelion1.922 AU
Semi-major axis4.087 AU
Eccentricity0.5297
Orbital period8.26a
Inclination19.100°
Last perihelion12 May 2024[2]
Next perihelion7 August 2032[3]
Physical characteristics[4]
Mean radius
0.95 km (0.59 mi)
0.04 (assumed)
  • (V–R) = 0.81±0.10
  • (R–I) = 0.26±0.09
Comet total
magnitude
(M1)
13.9[5]
Close

Observations

50P/Arend was observed at its brightest at a maximum magnitude of 14 when it was discovered in 1951. At the comet's next apparition on September 1, 1959, did not exceed 17 if it had not been for an outburst in November which affected its brightness to magnitude 15.5. The observed orbital period was 7.8 years at the time of its discovery however at each succeeding perihelion has led to less favorable observations due to its 0.64 astronomical units (AU) as it approached Jupiter in 1969, even if its maximum magnitude was 15. This approach also led to the comet's orbital period to increase to 8.0 years.[1]

Long-term motion studies conducted by Brian G. Marsden on the comet 50P/Arend renders the comet's orbital eccentricity at 0.5 which makes it relatively undisturbed by Jupiter over the last 200-year cycles despite as passage of only 0.49 AU.[1][6][7][8] The study was conducted inside the interval where libration happens. Several comets, namely 50P/Arend, 4P/Faye, 6P/d'Arrest, 22P/Kopff, 36P/Whipple, 78P/Gehrels, 92P/Sanguin, 4015 Wilson-Harrington, and 128P/Shoemaker-Holt, were observed at the Palomar Observatory. Visible coma activity was only observed from 4P/Faye and 50P/Arend out of the 9 other comets from data obtained in May 2000 and March 2001.[9] There have been 1069 observations from October 8, 1951, to February 19, 2008, also where its mean residual is at 0".60.[10]

The nucleus of the comet has a radius of 0.95 ± 0.03 kilometers, assuming a geometric albedo of 0.04.[4]

References

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