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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. Comet WISE and NEOWISE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet_WISE_and_NEOWISE

    Comet WISE and Comet NEOWISE may refer to any comets below discovered by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer satellite between 2009 and 2024: Periodic comets [ edit ]

  5. Comet dust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet_dust

    A thick accumulation of dust layers might be a good description of all of the short period comets, as dust layers with thicknesses on the order of meters are thought to have accumulated on the surfaces of short-period comet nuclei. The accumulation of dust layers over time would change the physical character of the short-period comet.

  6. Comet NEOWISE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet_NEOWISE

    For observers in the Northern Hemisphere, the comet could be seen on the northwestern horizon, below the Big Dipper. North of 45 degrees north, the comet was visible all night in mid-July 2020. On July 30, Comet NEOWISE entered the constellation of Coma Berenices, below the bright star Arcturus. NEOWISE was retroactively dubbed the Great Comet ...

  7. Bow shock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bow_shock

    Bow shocks form at comets as a result of the interaction between the solar wind and the cometary ionosphere. Far away from the Sun, a comet is an icy boulder without an atmosphere. As it approaches the Sun, the heat of the sunlight causes gas to be released from the cometary nucleus, creating an atmosphere called a coma. The coma is partially ...

  8. Great Comet of 1680 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Comet_of_1680

    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 ...

  9. C/2004 Q1 (Tucker) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C/2004_Q1_(Tucker)

    Comet Tucker, formally designated as C/2004 Q1, is a faint non-periodic comet that had a very distant perihelion on 11 December 2004. It was the second of two comets discovered by famed amateur astronomer, Roy A. Tucker .