13P/Olbers | |
Discoverer: | Heinrich Olbers |
Discovery Date: | March 6, 1815 |
Designations: | 1815 E1; 1887 Q1; 1887 V; 1887f; 1956 A1; 1956 IV; 1956a |
Epoch: | 2024-06-19 (JD 2460480.5) |
Semimajor: | 16.87 AU |
Perihelion: | 1.175 AU |
Aphelion: | 32.56 AU |
Eccentricity: | 0.9303 |
Period: | 69.3 yr |
Inclination: | 44.67° |
Asc Node: | 85.8° |
Arg Peri: | 64.4° |
Earth Moid: | 0.466 AU |
Jupiter Moid: | 0.692 AU |
M1: | 6.9 |
Last P: | June 30, 2024 June 19, 1956 |
Next P: | March 20, 2094 |
13P/Olbers is a periodic comet with an orbital period of 69 years. It fits the classical definition of a Halley-type comet with a period between 20 and 200 years. The comet last passed perihelion 30 June 2024 and it was previously seen in 1956. The next perihelion is in 2094.
Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers discovered the comet on 6 March 1815 and described it as small. The comet came to perihelion on 26 April 1815 and reached an apparent magnitude of about 5, and was faintly visible by naked eye. Its orbit was first computed by Carl Friedrich Gauss on March 31 as parabolic, and Friedrich Bessel calculated an orbital period of 73.9 years using observations from June. Calculations by other astronomers during that era resulted anywhere between 72 and 77 years. Modern solutions give an orbital period of 74.9 years for the 1815 epoch.
Orbital period at different epochs | |||||||
Orbital period (years) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1887 | 72.37 | ||||||
1956 | 69.54 | ||||||
2024 | 69.25 | ||||||
2094 | 70.72 |
The comet was recovered on 4 January 1956 by Antonín Mrkos. The comet was then located in Eridanus and its apparent magnitude was estimated to be 16. He then found the comet in plates obtained by the McDonald Observatory on 12 November 1955.[2] The comet passed perihelion on 19 June 1956 and reached an apparent magnitude of 6.5, while its tail was about one degree long.
The comet was recovered on 24 August 2023 by Alan Hale with the Las Cumbres Observatory at Siding Spring, and then additional pre-recovery images from August 13 were located. The comet then had an estimated apparent magntitude of about 22. On 16 November 2023 the comet came to opposition 139 degrees from the Sun. On 14 January 2024 the comet had an estimated magnitude of 15.3, was reported to have a strongly condensed coma measuring 0.9 arcminutes across and a faint tail one arcminute. By 10 March 2024 the comet had brightened to a magnitude of 11.4 and the coma was 4 arcminutes across. The comet was observed visually on April 12 to have a magnitude of 9.2, being a magnitude brighter than the ephemeris.[3] It came to perihelion on June 30, 2024, when it was 1.18 AU from the Sun and 1.94 AU from Earth. It was expected to brighten to about apparent magnitude 7−8 but peaked at 6–7.
2024-Jul-20 | 1.895AU | 35° | |
2094-Jan-09 | 0.676AU | 134° |
Before the 2023 recovery, while the last observation was in 1956, Kinoshita calculated that the comet would come to a future perihelion passage (closest approach to the Sun) on 22 March 2094. Accounting for observations in 2023–4, the nominal time of perihelion passage is now calculated to be 20 March 2094.
There is some speculation that 13P/Olbers has an associated annual meteor shower on Mars coming from the direction of Beta Canis Majoris.[4] The minimum orbit intersection distance of the orbits of comet Olbers and Mars is 0.0266AU and the meteors impact the planet with a velocity of 27 km/s. An intersection distance of less than 0.1 AU and an impact speed high enough for the meteors to become ablaze are considered good predictors for a potential meteor shower.[5]