Great Comet of 1680 explained

C/1680 V1
Discoverer:Gottfried Kirch
Discovery Date:14 November 1680
Designations:Great Comet of 1680, 1680 V1
Epoch:1680-Nov-29.0
2335000.5(?)
Observation Arc:125 days
Obs:30
Semimajor:444 au
Perihelion:0.00622 au[1]
Aphelion:890 au
Eccentricity:0.999986
Period:~10,400 yr
Inclination:60.7°
Last P:December 18, 1680
Next P:Unknown

C/1680 V1, also called the Great Comet of 1680, Kirch's Comet, and Newton's Comet, was the first comet discovered by telescope. It was discovered by Gottfried Kirch and was one of the brightest comets of the seventeenth century.

Overview

The comet was discovered by Gottfried Kirch, a German astronomer, on 14 November 1680 (New Style), in Coburg, and it became one of the brightest comets of the seventeenth century – reputedly visible even in daytime – and was noted for its spectacularly long tail.[2] Passing 0.42 au from Earth on 30 November 1680, it sped around an extremely close perihelion of 0.0062abbr=onNaNabbr=on on 18 December 1680, reaching its peak brightness on 29 December as it swung outward.[3] [4] It was last observed on 19 March 1681.[1] JPL Horizons shows the comet has roughly a barycentric orbital period of 10,000 years. the comet is about 259au from the Sun.[5]

While the Kirch Comet of 1680–1681 was discovered by – and subsequently named for – Gottfried Kirch, credit must also be given to Eusebio Kino, the Spanish Jesuit priest who charted the comet's course. During his delayed departure for Mexico, Kino began his observations of the comet in Cádiz in late 1680. Upon his arrival in Mexico City, he published his Exposición astronómica de el cometa (Astronomical Account of the Comet; Mexico City, 1681) in which he presented his findings. Kino's Exposición astronómica is among the earliest scientific treatises published by a European in the New World.[6]

Basil Ringrose was serving under buccaneer Captain Bartholomew Sharpe and made the following observation shortly before raiding the Spanish port city of Coquimbo, Chile:

Friday, November 19th, 1680. This morning about an hour before the day we observed a comet to appear a degree N. from the bright in Libra. The body thereof seemed dull, and its tail extended itself 18 or 20 degrees in length, being of a pale colour and pointing directly N.N.W. Our prisoners hereupon reported to us that the Spaniards had seen very strange sights, both at Lima, the capital city of Peru, Guayaquil, and other places, much about the time of our coming into the South Seas.[7]

Although it was undeniably a sungrazing comet, it was probably not part of the Kreutz family.[8] Isaac Newton used the comet to test and verify Kepler's laws.[9] John Flamsteed was the first to propose that the two bright comets of 1680–1681 were the same comet, one traveling inbound to the Sun and the other outbound, and Newton originally disputed this. Newton later changed his mind, and then, with Edmond Halley's help, purloined some of Flamsteed's data to verify this was the case without giving Flamsteed credit.[9]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1681-03-19 last obs (Encke: 125-day data arc) . JPL Small-Body Database Browser: C/1680 V1 . . 26 July 2011.
  2. Book: Seargent, David A. J. . The Greatest Comets in History: Broom Stars and Celestial Scimitars . 2008 . Springer Science & Business Media . 9780387095134 . 112–113 . en .
  3. Web site: JPL Dastcom Comet Orbital Elements . Num Name ... q ... Tp ... C/1680 V1 (1680 V1) ... 0.00622200 ... 16801218.48760 . 10 February 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080906174837/http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/data/ELEMENTS.COMET . 6 September 2008 .
  4. Web site: Great Comets in History . Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California Institute of Technology (Solar System Dynamics) . Donald Yeomans . 1 August 2007.
  5. NASA JPL Horizons ephemeris 2022–2030
  6. Book: Bolton, H. E. . Kino's Historical Memoir of the Pimería Alta . Cleveland, Ohio. Arthur H. Clark . 1919 . 1730711 . Reprint 1948.
  7. Book: Exquemelin . A. O. (Alexandre Olivier) . Stallybrass . William Swan . The buccaneers of America: a true account of the most remarkable assaults committed of late years upon the coast of the West Indies by the Buccaneers of Jamaica and Tortuga, both English and French ... . 1992 . Rio Grande Press . Glorieta, N.M. . 978-0-87380-176-8 . 382 . 1684 . 5 April 2021.
  8. Web site: A SOHO and Sungrazing Comet FAQ . Tony Hoffman . 6 February 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120805113942/http://home.earthlink.net/~tonyhoffman/SOHOfaq.htm . 5 August 2012 . dead .
  9. Web site: Jardine. Lisa. A Point of View: Crowd-sourcing comets. Magazine. BBC News. 20 May 2013. 15 March 2013.