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Discovered by | Shigenori Suzuki Yoshikazu Saigusa Hiroaki Mori Kiyomi Okazaki Shigeru Furuyama |
Discovery date | 5 October 1975 |
Designations | |
Alternative designations | 1975k, 1975X |
Orbital characteristics | |
Epoch | 31 October 1975 (JD 2442716.5) |
Observation arc | 90 days |
Number of observations | 112 |
Aphelion | 115.6 AU |
Perihelion | 0.838 AU |
Semi-major axis | 58.2 AU |
Eccentricity | 0.9856 |
Orbital period | 444 years |
Inclination | 118.233° |
Longitude of ascending node | 216.805° |
Argument of periapsis | 152.020° |
Last perihelion | 15 October 1975 |
Next perihelion | ~2410 |
TJupiter | -0.446 |
Earth MOID | 0.099 AU |
Jupiter MOID | 1.28 AU |
Comet total magnitude (M1) | 9.7 |
C/1975 T2 (Suzuki-Saigusa-Mori) is a long-period comet discovered on 10 October 1961. The comet approached Earth at a distance of 0.1 AU on 31 October 1975 and became visible with naked eye. The comet has been associated with the lambda Ursae Majorids meteor shower.
Observational history
The comet was discovered independently on 5 October 1975 by five Japanese observers, Shigenori Suzuki from Aichi, Yoshikazu Saigusa from Yamanashi, Hiroaki Mori from Gifu, Kiyomi Okazaki from Yamagata and Shigeru Furuyama from Ibaraki. However the rules about comet naming dictate that the names of the three discoverers whose telegram arrives first at the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams are included at the name. Hiroaki Mori had also discovered another comet, C/1975 T1 (Mori-Sato-Fujikawa), 70 minutes before spotting C/1975 T2.
Upon discovery the comet was descripted as diffuse, without central consentration or tail, and an apparent magnitude of 9. The comet brightened rapidly as it passed perihelion on 15 October and then moved towards Earth, with the closest approach taking place on 31 October. On 20 October 1975 the comet had brightened to a magnitude of 8. On 22 October John Bortle estimated its magnitude to be 6.8. On 28 October he estimated its magnitude to 5.5, while the coma had increased in size from 5 arcminutes on 12 October to 12 arcminutes on 28 October. Also on 28 October reported that the comet had a tail about one degree long and a diffuse halo about one degree across.
As the comet approached Earth, it moved between the Sun and Earth, and on 31 October it was at a solar elongation of 5 degrees. On 31 October was also the closest approach to Earth, passing at a distance of 0.104 AU (15.6 million km; 9.7 million mi) on 31 October 1975, 14:43 (UTC). The comet was moving southwards and was recovered on 3 November. On 4 November T. Morgan from Sydney Observatory estimated its magnitude to be 4. On 6 November David Seargent spotted the comet with naked eye, estimating an apparent magnitude of 4.8. By 12 November the comet the comet had faded to a magnitude of 7.2. The comet was last detected on 4 January 1976.
Meteor showers
The possibility that the comet could produce a meteor shower was suggested by Vladimir Guth and I. Hasegawa on 30 October 1975, as the comet apprached its ascending node. However no definite activity was observed. Meteors that could be created by the comet were detected in cameras of the Croatian Meteor Network and the SonotaCo from 2007 to 2011 and were named the λ Ursae Majorids. The link was confirmed with numerical models. The comet has also been suggested to be the parent body of the October Ursae Majorids, which were first observed in 2006.
See also
- C/2023 H2 (Lemmon) - a comet with similar orbit
References
- ^ Marsden, Brian K. (7 October 1975). "1975j; 1975k; 1975c". International Astronomical Union Circular. 2847.
- ^ "C/1975 T2 (Suzuki-Saigusa-Mori) – JPL Small-Body Database Lookup". ssd.jpl.nasa.gov. Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 25 December 2024.
- Green, D. W. E. (1981). "The apparition of Comet Suzuki-Saigusa-Mori 1975 X." Journal of the Association of Lunar and Planetary Observers, the Strolling Astronomer. 29: 12–18.
- Marsden, Brian K. (21 October 1975). "1975k; MX0656-07". International Astronomical Union Circular. 2852.
- Marsden, Brian K. (28 October 1975). "1975k; 1975h". International Astronomical Union Circular. 2856.
- ^ Kronk, Gary W.; Meyer, Maik; Seargent, David Allan John (1999). Cometography: Volume 5, 1960-1982: A Catalog of Comets. Cambridge University Press. pp. 467–470. ISBN 978-0-521-87226-3.
- Marsden, Brian K. (4 December 1975). "1975k". International Astronomical Union Circular. 2877.
- Marsden, Brian K. (21 November 1975). "1975p; TRANSIENT HIGH-LATITUDE X-RAY SOURCE; X Per; 1975k". International Astronomical Union Circular. 2869.
- Marsden, Brian K. (30 October 1975). "SN IN NGC 7723; 1975k; N Cyg 1975; N Sct 1975". International Astronomical Union Circular. 2858.
- Andreić, Željko; Šegon, Damir; Korlević, Korado; Novoselnik, Filip; Vida, Denis; Skokić, Ivica (August 2013). "Ten possible new showers from the Croatian Meteor Network and SonotaCo datasets". WGN, Journal of the International Meteor Organization. 41 (4): 103–108. ISSN 1016-3115.
- Hajduková, M.; Neslušan, L. (July 2019). "Modeling of the meteoroid stream of comet C/1975 T2 and λ -Ursae Majorids". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 627: A73. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201935630.
- Gajdoš, Štefan (June 2008). "Search for Past Signs of October Ursae Majorids". Earth, Moon, and Planets. 102 (1–4): 117–123. doi:10.1007/s11038-007-9196-9.