80P/Peters–Hartley

80P/Peters–Hartley
Discovery
Discovered by Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters of Capodimonte Observatory, Naples, Italy
Discovery date 26 June 1846
Alternative
designations
1990 IX, 1990d, 80P/1982 N1, 1982 III, 1982h, 80P/1846 M1, 1846 VI
Orbital characteristics A
Epoch 9 December 2014
Aphelion 6.46 AU
Perihelion 1.6127 AU
Semi-major axis 4.022 AU
Eccentricity 0.599
Orbital period 8.12 a
Inclination 29.922°
Last perihelion 10 Nov 2014
Next perihelion 2022

80P/Peters–Hartley is a periodic comet in the Solar System with an orbital period of 8.12 years.

It was originally discovered by Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters of Capodimonte Observatory, Naples, Italy. There was insufficient data to accurately compute the orbit, and the comet was lost for well over a hundred years.

It was accidentally rediscovered by Malcolm Hartley at the UK Schmidt Telescope Unit, Siding Spring, Australia on a photographic plate exposed on 11 July 1982. He estimated its brightness at an magnitude of 15. The sighting was confirmed by the Perth Observatory, where M. C. Candy calculated the orbit and concluded that Hartley had indeed relocated the lost Peter's comet. I. Hasegawa and Syuichi Nakano had simultaneously reached the same conclusion.

It was observed at its next apparition in 1990 by R. H. McNaught of the Siding Spring observatory, who described as diffuse with a brightness of magnitude 14. It was subsequently observed in 1998, 2006 and 2014.

See also

References

    Numbered comets
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