156P/Russell–LINEAR

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156P/Russell–LINEAR
Comet 156P/Russell–LINEAR on 9 December 2020 by NEOWISE
Discovery[1]
Discovered byKenneth S. Russell
Discovery dateSeptember 1986
Designations
P/1986 R1, 1993 WU, 2000 QD181, 2000 XV43
Orbital characteristics[4]
Epoch20 March 2020
Aphelion5.591 AU
Perihelion1.333 AU
Semi-major axis3.462 AU
Eccentricity0.615
Orbital period6.44 years
Inclination15.264°
35.397°
Argument of
periapsis
0.38°
Last perihelion18 November 2020[2]
Next perihelion2027-Apr-30[3]
Earth MOID0.339 AU
Jupiter MOID0.100 AU
Comet total
magnitude
(M1)
12.7 [4]

156P/Russell–LINEAR is a Jupiter family periodic comet with an orbital period of 6.4 years. It was discovered by Kenneth S. Russell in September 1986.[5]

Observational history[edit]

The comet was found by Australian astronomer Kenneth S. Russell in September 1986 on a plate exposed on 3 September 1986 using the U.K. Schmidt Telescope of Siding Spring Observatory, Australia.[5] The comet had an apparent magnitude of 17. Follow up observations on 25 September failed to recover the comet.[1] The comet was spotted again in a plate exposed using the 0.46-m Schmidt telescope of Palomar Observatory by Carolyn S. Shoemaker on 19 November 1993. The comet had asteroidal appearance and was given the provisional designation 1993 WU.[1]

The comet was observed again during the 2000 perihelion. The comet was noted as an asteroidal object by Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research on 31 August and 5 November and was given the provisional designation 2000 QD181, and was observed again in November 2000-January 2001 and named 2000XV43. Timothy B. Spahr noted that these objects were the same as the 1986 comet.[1] It was then given the number 156.[6]

The comet had passed 0.70 AU from Jupiter in November 1970 and its perihelion distance decreased from 1.73 AU to 1.56 AU. The comet approached again to Jupiter in March 2018 at a distance of 0.36 AU and its perihelion distance decreased to 1.33 AU, while the orbital period decreased from 6.85 years to 6.44 years.[5][4]

During the 2020 perihelion, the comet approached to 0.48 AU from Earth on 24 October 2020.[5] It brightened to an apparent magnitude of 9.7 in mid November 2020.[7] The cyanide and diatomic carbon production rate was estimated to be (2.85±0.51)×1024 mol/s and (3.44±0.62)×1024 mol/s respectively on 14 October 2020, when the comet was located at an heliocentrical distance of 1.40 AU.[8] The production rates are comparable to that of other Jupiter-family comets. Two strong jets were observed during perihelion and persisted until December, indicating increased activity after perihelion.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Green, Daniel (19 April 2003). "P/2000 QD_181 = 1986 R1 = 1993 WU". International Astronomical Union Circular. 8118: 1.
  2. ^ "156P/Russell-LINEAR Orbit". Minor Planet Center.
  3. ^ "Horizons Batch for 156P/Russell-LINEAR (90001084) on 2027-Apr-30" (Perihelion occurs when rdot flips from negative to positive). JPL Horizons. Retrieved 2023-07-06. (JPL#48/Soln.date: 2023-May-03)
  4. ^ a b c "Small-Body Database Lookup: 156P/Russell-LINEAR". ssd.jpl.nasa.gov. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d Kronk, Gary. "C&MS: 156P/Russell-LINEAR". cometography.com. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  6. ^ Green, D. W. E (1 May 2003). "Comet 156P/Russell-LINEAR". International Astronomical Union Circular. 8128: 3. ISSN 0081-0304.
  7. ^ Yoshida, Seiichi. "Weekly Information about Bright Comets (2020 Nov. 28: North)". www.aerith.net. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  8. ^ "ATel #14101: TRAPPIST comet production rates: 88/Howell, C/2020 M3 (ATLAS), C/2020 S3 (Erasmus), 156P/Russell-LINEAR". The Astronomer's Telegram. 16 October 2020. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  9. ^ Aravind, K.; Halder, Prithish; Ganesh, Shashikiran; Sahu, Devendra; Serra-Ricart, Miquel; Chambó, José J.; Angchuk, Dorje; Sivarani, Thirupathi (September 2022). "Optical observations and dust modelling of comet 156P/Russell-LINEAR". Icarus. 383: 115042. arXiv:2204.09727. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2022.115042.

External links[edit]

Numbered comets
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