C/1942 X1 (Whipple–Fedtke–Tevzadze)

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C/1942 X1 (Whipple–Fedtke–Tevzadze)
The comet on 27 and 28 January 1943 from the 24-inch reflector of the Yerkes Observatory.
Discovery
Discovered byFred Whipple
Discovery date8 December 1942
Designations
1943 I
Orbital characteristics[2]
Epoch1943-Feb-05
Observation arc257 days
Earliest precovery date5 November 1942
Aphelion345 AU
Perihelion1.354 AU
Eccentricity0.9922
Orbital period1586 years (inbound)[1]
2072 years (outbound)[1]
Inclination19.71°
100.80°
Argument of
periapsis
39.84°
Last perihelion6 February 1943

C/1942 X1 (Whipple–Fedtke–Tevzadze) is a non-periodic comet discovered on 8 December 1942 by Fred Whipple and independently, on later days, by Carl Fedtke and G. A. Tevzadze.

Observational history[edit]

Fred Whipple discovered the comet in patrol plates from Harvard College Observatory exposed on 8.24 December 1942. The comet was estimated to be magnitude 10. Whipple searched in other patrol plates for the comet and found it in 20 more plates, the earliest of which dated from 5 November. The comet was then magnitude 12. Carl Fedtke from Konigsberg discovered it independently on 11 December 1942, while, due to communications break-down during World War II, G. A. Tevzadze from Abastumani Astrophysical Observatory, Georgia, found the comet on 28 December without knowing it was already discovered.[1]

In early January 1943 the comet was estimated to have an apparent magnitude of 6, while its tail was estimated to be about half a degree long. M. Beyer of Hamburg Observatory, Bergedorf, Germany, spotted the comet with the naked eye on 8 January, estimating its magnitude to be 5.5. The closest approach to Earth took place on 25 January 1943, at a distance of 0.43 AU.[1] At that date its magnitude was estimated to be between 3.8 and 5 and its tail extended for 1.6 degrees. The perihelion was on 6 February 1943, at 1.35 AU. N. I. Tchudovitchev from Engelhardt Observatory photographed the comet revealing its tail was 6 degrees long.[1]

The comet exhibited a sudden rise in magnitude on 21 February. On 24 February, its magnitude was estimated to be 3.2 to 3.95 and its tail extended for 6.5 degrees while its coma was 27 arcminutes across. The tail in photographs exhibited several knots in February and March. On 4 March, the magnitude of the comet was estimated to be between 4.2 and 5.1, on 15 March was estimated to be between 4.5 and 5.2, and on 30 March between 5.2 and 5.8. The tail extended for half a degree.[1] Apart from the 24 February outburst, the apparent magnitude seen to rise above the expected also on 24 March, 23 April, 23 May and 21 June.[3]

The comet continued to fade and on 29 April its magnitude was estimated to be between 6.7 and 7.2 and the tail was 0.6 degrees long. In early June its magnitude was about 9. It was last detected on 2 August 1943.[1]

Scientific results[edit]

The spectrum of the comet was obtained between 24 February and 9 March 1943. The comet exhibited strong cyanide (CN) and methylene (CH2) lines, stronger than the diatomic carbon lines (Swan band), which were less intense than usual. The λ4315 band associated with methylidyne (CH) was also present, although weak. The λ3883 0-0 CN line was complex and could be resolved into individual lines.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Kronk, Gary W. (2009). Cometography: A Catalog of Comets, Volume 4 1933 - 1959. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 176–189. ISBN 9780521585071.
  2. ^ "Small-Body Database Lookup: C/1942 X1 (Whipple-Fedtke-Tevzadze)". ssd.jpl.nasa.gov. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  3. ^ Bobrovnikoff, N. T. (1 January 1943). "The brightness of comet 1942g (Whipple)". Popular Astronomy. 51: 481. ISSN 0197-7482.
  4. ^ McKellar, Andrew (1 March 1944). "The Spectrum of Comet WHIPPLE-FEDTKÉ-TEVZADZE (1942g)". The Astrophysical Journal. 99: 162. doi:10.1086/144604. ISSN 0004-637X.

External links[edit]