C/2014 OG392 with its coma imaged by the Lowell Discovery Telescope on 14 October 2020 | |
Discovery | |
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Discovered by | Pan-STARRS |
Discovery date | 28 July 2014 |
Orbital characteristics | |
Epoch | 2020-12-17 (2459200.5) |
Observation arc | 9.3 years |
Orbit type | Centaur / Chiron-type |
Aphelion | 14.463 AU |
Perihelion | 9.9697 AU (near Saturn's distance) |
Semi-major axis | 12.216 AU |
Eccentricity | 0.18389 |
Orbital period | 42.7 yr |
Inclination | 9.0333° |
Last perihelion | 29 July 1979 |
Next perihelion | 29 November 2021 |
TJupiter | 3.4 |
Earth MOID | 8.99 AU (1.345 billion km) |
Jupiter MOID | 5.08 AU (760 million km) |
Physical characteristics | |
Dimensions | 20 km (albedo=0.1) Absolute magnitude: H=10.8 (MPC) H=11.3 (corrected) |
C/2014 OG392 (PanSTARRS) is a comet discovered as a centaur on 28 July 2014 when it was 11.5 AU (1.72 billion km) from the Sun and had an apparent magnitude of 21. The comet was relatively easier to detect at this distance because the nucleus is estimated to be 20 km in diameter.
DECam images from 2017 of the comet at 10.6 AU (1.59 billion km) from the Sun showed activity likely produced by carbon dioxide (CO2) and/or ammonia (NH3) sublimation (off-gassing).
Clones of the orbit of C/2014 OG392 estimate a dynamic lifetime (amount of time in the current orbit) of 13 thousand to a million years.
Perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) takes place not far from Saturn's orbit with a Saturn minimum orbit intersection distance of 0.9 AU (130 million km); for example on 29 September 2231 at about 0.934 AU (139.7 million km) ±1 million km from Saturn.
C/2014 OG392 will come to opposition on 1 November 2021 in the constellation of Cetus when it will have a solar elongation of 170 degrees. Numerical integration shows the comet last came to perihelion in late July 1979 and will next come to perihelion on 29 November 2021.
References
- ^ JPL Horizons Observer Location: @sun (Perihelion occurs when deldot changes from negative to positive.)
- ^ Chandler, Colin; Kueny, Jay; Trujillo, Chad; Trilling, David; Oldroyd, William (2020). "Cometary Activity Discovered on a Distant Centaur: A Nonaqueous Sublimation Mechanism". The Astrophysical Journal. 892 (2): L38. arXiv:2003.04904. Bibcode:2020ApJ...892L..38C. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/ab7dc6. S2CID 212657575.
- "MPEC 2020-U241 : COMET C/2014 OG392 (PANSTARRS)". IAU Minor Planet Center. 2020-10-27. Retrieved 2021-01-15. (CK14Od2G)
- "2014 OG392 (PANSTARRS)". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
- JPL Horizons Observer Location: @699 Table Settings: 20,39 (Uncertainty is 3-sigma.)
External links
- C/2014 OG392 at the JPL Small-Body Database
- C/2014 OG392 ( PanSTARRS ) – Seiichi Yoshida
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