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{{short description|Long-period comet}} {{short description|Long-period comet}}
{{Infobox comet {{Infobox comet
| name = C/1983 J1 (Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawa) | name = C/1983 J1 (Sugano–Saigusa–Fujikawa)
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'''C/1983 J1 (Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawa)''' is a ] discovered by Masuo Sugano, Yoshikazu Saigusa, and ] on 8 May 1983. The comet approached Earth at a distance of 0.063 AU on 12 June 1983.{{r|jpl}} '''C/1983 J1 (Sugano–Saigusa–Fujikawa)''' is a ] discovered by Masuo Sugano, Yoshikazu Saigusa, and ] on 8 May 1983. The comet approached Earth at a distance of 0.063 AU on 12 June 1983.{{r|jpl}}


== Observational history == == Observational history ==
The comet was discovered on 8 May 1983 by three observers from Japan, who found the comet independently within 48 minutes. The comet was first discovered by Masuo Sugano from ] using a 15-cm ], followed by Yoshikazu Saigusa from ] using a 0.20m reflector, and Shigehisa Fujikawa from ] using 12×120 ].<ref name="Marsden1986">{{cite journal |last1=G. |first1=Marsden, B. |title=Comets in 1983 |journal=Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society |date=March 1986 |volume=27 |pages=102-118 |url=https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1986QJRAS..27..102M/abstract |language=en |issn=0035-8738}}</ref> They estimated its magnitude to be 7. B. Mayer observed the comet the next day and mentioned it had a central consentration within a coma of 2 arcminutes, while a photograph obtained by E. Everhart revealed a tail 15 arcminutes long.<ref name="IAUC3803"/> An photo by Skiff and Lugenbuhl using the Pluto Telescope of ] showed the tail was 1.5 degrees long.<ref name="Marsden1986"/> The comet was discovered on 8 May 1983 by three observers from Japan, who found the comet independently within 48 minutes. The comet was first discovered by Masuo Sugano from ] using a 15–cm ], followed by Yoshikazu Saigusa from ] using a 0.20–m reflector, and Shigehisa Fujikawa from ] using 12×120 ].<ref name="Marsden1986">{{cite journal |last1=G. |first1=Marsden, B. |title=Comets in 1983 |journal=Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society |date=March 1986 |volume=27 |pages=102-118 |url=https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1986QJRAS..27..102M/abstract |language=en |issn=0035-8738}}</ref> They estimated its magnitude to be 7. B. Mayer observed the comet the next day and mentioned it had a central consentration within a coma of 2 arcminutes, while a photograph obtained by E. Everhart revealed a tail 15 arcminutes long.<ref name="IAUC3803"/> An photo by Skiff and Lugenbuhl using the Pluto Telescope of ] showed the tail was 1.5 degrees long.<ref name="Marsden1986"/>


The comet upon discovery had passed perihelion, which had taken place on 1 May, and was located in ], at a ] of 29 degrees.<ref name="cometography">{{cite book |last1=Kronk |first1=Gary W. |title=Cometography. Volume 6: 1983–1993 |date=2017 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=West Nyack |isbn=9781139033947 |pages=12–17}}</ref> It was quickly found that the comet would make a close approach to Earth, just about a month after ] passed 0.03 AU from Earth.<ref name="Marsden1986"/> The comet faded slightly during May, despite the fact that it was approaching Earth, and on 20 May its magnitude was estimated to be 8.3.<ref name="cometography"/> The comet upon discovery had passed perihelion, which had taken place on 1 May, and was located in ], at a ] of 29 degrees.<ref name="cometography">{{cite book |last1=Kronk |first1=Gary W. |title=Cometography. Volume 6: 1983–1993 |date=2017 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=West Nyack |isbn=9781139033947 |pages=12–17}}</ref> It was quickly found that the comet would make a close approach to Earth, just about a month after ] passed 0.03 AU from Earth.<ref name="Marsden1986"/> The comet faded slightly during May, despite the fact that it was approaching Earth, and on 20 May its magnitude was estimated to be 8.3.<ref name="cometography"/>
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{{Authority control}} {{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawa, 1983 J1}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Sugano–Saigusa–Fujikawa, 1983 J1}}
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Revision as of 17:30, 26 December 2024

Long-period comet
C/1983 J1 (Sugano–Saigusa–Fujikawa)
Discovery
Discovered byMasuo Sugano
Yoshikazu Saigusa
Shigehisa Fujikawa
Discovery date8 May 1983
Designations
Alternative designations1983e, 1983V
Orbital characteristics
Epoch15 May 1983 (JD 2445469.5)
Observation arc39 days
Number of
observations
55
Aphelion9,600 AU
Perihelion0.471 AU
Semi-major axis4,800 AU
Eccentricity0.9999
Orbital period330,000 years
Inclination96.623°
Longitude of
ascending node
83.039°
Argument of
periapsis
82.173°
Last perihelion1 May 1983
TJupiter-0.097
Earth MOID0.049 AU
Jupiter MOID3.35 AU
Physical characteristics
Comet total
magnitude
(M1)
12.2
Apparent magnitude5.5 (max.)

C/1983 J1 (Sugano–Saigusa–Fujikawa) is a non-periodic comet discovered by Masuo Sugano, Yoshikazu Saigusa, and Shigehisa Fujikawa on 8 May 1983. The comet approached Earth at a distance of 0.063 AU on 12 June 1983.

Observational history

The comet was discovered on 8 May 1983 by three observers from Japan, who found the comet independently within 48 minutes. The comet was first discovered by Masuo Sugano from Hyogo using a 15–cm reflector telescope, followed by Yoshikazu Saigusa from Kofu, Yamanashi using a 0.20–m reflector, and Shigehisa Fujikawa from Ōnohara, Kagawa using 12×120 binoculars. They estimated its magnitude to be 7. B. Mayer observed the comet the next day and mentioned it had a central consentration within a coma of 2 arcminutes, while a photograph obtained by E. Everhart revealed a tail 15 arcminutes long. An photo by Skiff and Lugenbuhl using the Pluto Telescope of Lowell Observatory showed the tail was 1.5 degrees long.

The comet upon discovery had passed perihelion, which had taken place on 1 May, and was located in Andromeda, at a solar elongation of 29 degrees. It was quickly found that the comet would make a close approach to Earth, just about a month after C/1983 H1 (IRAS–Araki–Alcock) passed 0.03 AU from Earth. The comet faded slightly during May, despite the fact that it was approaching Earth, and on 20 May its magnitude was estimated to be 8.3.

The comet started to brighten again in early June as it approached Earth. On June 6 the comet was reported to have an apparent magnitude of 6.6 and its coma was 15 arcminutes across. The closest approach to Earth took place at a distance of 0.063 AU (9.4 million km; 5.9 million mi) on 12 June 1983, at 19:00 (UTC). The comet was reported to have been visible with naked eye, with an apparent magnitude of 5.5, and being diffuse, with a coma about one degree across. After that the comet faded rapidly and on 16 June it had a magnitude of 7.8 and a coma 17 arcminutes across according to David Seargent. The comet was then moving rapidly southwards and was last detected on 20 June.

Scientific results

The comet was observed in radiowaves by the Arecibo Observatory on 11 June 1983. The comet had a very small cross section, about 0.04 km, indicating it is a very small object. Infrared and visual photometry indicate that it has an effective radius of less than 370 meters.

The radio spectrum of the comet revealed lines associated with cyanoacetylene but for other species only upper limits could be calculated. On 13 June the comet was observed in infrared and based on its spectrum the production rate was calculated to be (7±3.5)×10 atoms/s, which corresponds to a water production rate of 1.1×10 mol/s. Other species like NH2, CN, C2, and C3 were found to be unusually low relative to when compared with other comets. The dust/gas mass ratio was below 0.01 on 12 June.

References

  1. ^ Marsden, Brian G. (9 May 1983). "1983e; Poss. SN IN NGC 4258". International Astronomical Union Circular. 3803.
  2. ^ "C/1983 J1 (Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawa) – JPL Small-Body Database Lookup". ssd.jpl.nasa.gov. Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 25 December 2024.
  3. ^ G., Marsden, B. (March 1986). "Comets in 1983". Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society. 27: 102–118. ISSN 0035-8738.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Kronk, Gary W. (2017). Cometography. Volume 6: 1983–1993. West Nyack: Cambridge University Press. pp. 12–17. ISBN 9781139033947.
  5. Harmon, J.K.; Campbell, D.B.; Ostro, S.J.; Nolan, M.C. (December 1999). "Radar observations of comets" (PDF). Planetary and Space Science. 47 (12): 1409–1422. doi:10.1016/S0032-0633(99)00068-9.
  6. ^ Hanner, M. S.; Newburn, R. L.; Spinrad, H.; Veeder, G. J. (October 1987). "Comet Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawa (1983V) - A small, puzzling comet". The Astronomical Journal. 94: 1081. doi:10.1086/114544.
  7. Irvine, W.M.; Abraham, Z.; A'Hearn, M.; Altenhoff, W.; Andersson, Ch.; Bally, J.; Batrla, W.; Baudry, A.; Bockelée-Morvan, D.; Chin, G.; Crovisier, J.; de Pater, I.; Despois, D.; Ekelund, L.; Gerard, E.; Hasegawa, T.; Heiles, C.; Hollis, J.M.; Huchtmeier, W.; Kaifu, N.; Levreault, R.; Masson, C.R.; Palmer, P.; Perault, M.; Rickard, L.J.; Sargent, A.I.; Scalise, E.; Schloerb, F.P.; Schmidt, J.; Stark, A.A.; Stevens, M.; Stumpff, P.; Sutton, E.C.; Swade, D.; Sykes, M.; Turner, B.; Wade, C.; Walmsley, M.; Webber, J.; Winnberg, A.; Wootten, A. (October 1984). "Radioastronomical observations of comets IRAS-Araki-Alcock (1983d) and Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawa (1983e)". Icarus. 60 (1): 215–220. doi:10.1016/0019-1035(84)90150-7.

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