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  2. List of long-period comets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_long-period_comets

    These comets come from the Kuiper belt and scattered disk, beyond the orbit of Pluto, with possible origins in the Oort cloud for many. For comets with an orbital period of over 1000 years (semi-major axis greater than ~100 AU), see the List of near-parabolic comets .

  3. 81P/Wild - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/81P/Wild

    Comet 81P/Wild, also known as Wild 2 (pronounced "vilt two") (/ ˈ v ɪ l t / VILT), is a comet with a period of 6.4 years named after Swiss astronomer Paul Wild, who discovered it on January 6, 1978, using a 40-cm Schmidt telescope at Zimmerwald, Switzerland. [6] For most of its 4.5 billion-year lifetime, Wild 2 probably had a more distant and ...

  4. Comet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet

    Comets whose aphelia are near a major planet's orbit are called its "family". [81] Such families are thought to arise from the planet capturing formerly long-period comets into shorter orbits. [82] At the shorter orbital period extreme, Encke's Comet has an orbit that does not reach the orbit of Jupiter, and is known as an Encke-type comet.

  5. List of comets by type - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_comets_by_type

    This is a list of comets (bodies that travel in elliptical, parabolic, and sometimes hyperbolic orbits and display a tail behind them) listed by type. Comets are sorted into four categories: periodic comets (e.g. Halley's Comet), non-periodic comets (e.g. Comet Hale–Bopp), comets with no meaningful orbit (the Great Comet of 1106), and lost comets (), displayed as either P (periodic), C (non ...

  6. 5D/Brorsen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5D/Brorsen

    The comet's orbit was still relatively uncertain, made worse by its approach to Jupiter in 1854. Karl Christian Bruhns found a comet on 18 March 1857. [3] Soon an orbit was computed and it was found to be 5D/Brorsen, although predictions were three months off. [3] The comet was followed until June 1857, and the orbit was then well established. [3]

  7. A massive asteroid has a chance to hit Earth. Here's what to ...

    www.aol.com/news/massive-asteroid-chance-hit...

    A similar scenario unfolded in 2004 with Apophis, an asteroid initially projected to have a 2.7 percent chance of striking Earth in 2029. Further observations ruled out an impact. "City killer ...

  8. List of orbits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_orbits

    Galactocentric orbit: [2] An orbit about the center of a galaxy. The Sun follows this type of orbit about the Galactic Center of the Milky Way. Heliocentric orbit: An orbit around the Sun. In the Solar System, all planets, comets, and asteroids are in such orbits, as are many artificial satellites and pieces of space debris.

  9. List of hyperbolic comets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hyperbolic_comets

    Astronomers have been discovering weakly hyperbolic comets that were perturbed out of the Oort Cloud since the mid-1800s. Prior to finding a well-determined orbit for comets, the JPL Small-Body Database and the Minor Planet Center list comet orbits as having an assumed eccentricity of 1.0. (This is the eccentricity of a parabolic trajectory ...