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Comet


 

A comet is a small body in the solar system that orbits the sun and (at least occasionally)

Orbital characteristics

Comets are classified according to their orbital periods. Short period comets have orbits of less than 200 years, while Long period comets have longer orbits but remain gravitationally bound to the Sun. Single-apparition comets have parabolic or hyperbolic orbits which will cause them to permanently exit the solar system after one pass by the Sun.

Related Topics:
Parabolic - Hyperbolic

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Modern observations have revealed a few genuinely hyperbolic orbits, but no more than could be accounted for by perturbations from Jupiter. If comets pervaded interstellar space, they would be moving with velocities of the same order as the relative velocities of stars near the Sun (a few tens of kilometres per second). If such objects entered the solar system, they would have positive total energies, and would be observed to have genuinely hyperbolic orbits. A rough calculation shows that there might be 4 hyperbolic comets per century, within Jupiter's orbit, give or take one and perhaps two orders of magnitude ?.

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On the other extreme, the short period Comet Encke has an orbit which never places it farther from the Sun than Jupiter. Short-period comets are thought to originate in the Kuiper belt, whereas the source of long-period comets is thought to be the Oort cloud. A variety of mechanisms have been proposed to explain why comets get perturbed into highly elliptical orbits, including close approaches to other stars as the Sun follows its orbit through the Milky Way Galaxy; the Sun's hypothetical companion star Nemesis; or an unknown Planet X.

Related Topics:
Comet Encke - Jupiter - Kuiper belt - Oort cloud - Star - Milky Way - Galaxy - Nemesis - Planet X

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Because of their low masses, and their elliptical orbits which frequently take them close to the giant planets, cometary orbits are often perturbed. Short period comets display a strong tendency for their aphelia to coincide with a giant planet's orbital radius, with the Jupiter family of comets being the largest, as the histogram shows. It is clear that comets coming in from the Oort cloud often have their orbits strongly influenced by the gravity of giant planets as a result of a close encounter. Jupiter is the source of the greatest perturbations, being more than twice as massive as all the other planets combined, in addition to being the swiftest of the giant planets.

Related Topics:
Giant planet - Histogram

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Also because of gravitational interactions, a number of periodic comets discovered in earlier decades or previous centuries are now lost, since their orbits were never known well enough to know where to look for their future appearances. However, occasionally a "new" comet will be discovered and upon calculation of its orbit it turns out to be an old "lost" comet. An example is Comet 11P/Tempel-Swift-LINEAR, which was discovered in 1869 but became unobservable after 1908 due to perturbations by Jupiter, and was not found again until accidentally rediscovered by LINEAR in 2001.{{hnote|Kronk, '11P/Tempel-Swift-LINEAR'}}

Related Topics:
11P/Tempel-Swift-LINEAR - 1869 - 1908 - LINEAR - 2001

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~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
Physical characteristics
Orbital characteristics
Comet nomenclature
History of comet study
Great comets
Peculiar comets
Comets in fiction
See also
References
External links

 

 

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