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  2. C/1988 A1 (Liller) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C/1988_A1_(Liller)

    The comet reached minimum elongation on 13 March, on 25°. [4] It reached its peak brightness in April. Jacobson spotted the comet with naked eye on April 18. David H. Levy reported that the comet had an apparent magnitude of 4.7 with the naked eye on April 24. In the end of April the tail of the comet was reported to be up to 2–3 degrees long.

  3. Divination by Astrological and Meteorological Phenomena

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divination_by_Astrological...

    In some cases, the pages of the document roll out to be five feet long. Each comet's picture has a caption which describes an event its appearance corresponded to, such as "the death of the prince", "the coming of the plague", or "the three-year drought." One of the comets in the manuscript has four tails and resembles a swastika.

  4. Astronomical symbols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_symbols

    In modern academic writing, the Sun symbol is used for astronomical constants relating to the Sun. [10] T eff☉ represents the solar effective temperature, and the luminosity, mass, and radius of stars are often represented using the corresponding solar constants (L ☉, M ☉, and R ☉, respectively) as units of measurement. [11] [12] [13] [14]

  5. 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.

  6. List of Solar System objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Solar_System_objects

    Comets. List of periodic comets; List of near-parabolic comets; Small objects, including: Meteoroids; Interplanetary dust. Helium focusing cone, around the Sun; Human-made objects orbiting the Sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, and Saturn, including active artificial satellites and space junk; Heliosphere, a bubble in space produced by the solar ...

  7. Observational history of comets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Observational_history_of_comets

    Little is known of what people thought about comets before Aristotle, who observed his eponymous comet, and most of what is known comes secondhand.From cuneiform astronomical tablets, and works by Aristotle, Diodorus Siculus, Seneca, and one attributed to Plutarch but now thought to be Aetius, it is observed that ancient philosophers divided themselves into two main camps.

  8. 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 ...

  9. Discourse on Comets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discourse_on_Comets

    The Discourse on Comets (Italian: Discorso delle Comete) was a pamphlet published in 1619 with Mario Guiducci as the named author, though in reality it was mostly the work of Galileo Galilei. In it Galileo conjectured that comets were not physical bodies but atmospheric effects like the aurora borealis .