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76P/West–Kohoutek–Ikemura
76P/West–Kohoutek–Ikemura is a Jupiter-family periodic comet in the Solar System with a current orbital period of 6.47 years.
| Column 1 |
|---|
| 76P/W–K–I photographed from the Zwicky Transient Facility on 29 December 2019 |
| Richard M. WestLubos KohoutekToshihiko Ikemura |
| Geneva, SwitzerlandHamburg, GermanyShinshiro, Japan |
| January–March 1975 |
| P/1975 D1, P/1980 V2 |
| .mw-parser-output .plainlist ol,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul{line-height:inherit;list-style:none;margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol li,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul li{margin-bottom:0}1975 IV, 1981 VIII1987 XV, 1993 XXI1975b, 1980r1987x, 1993o |
| 21 January 2022 (JD 2459600.5) |
| 48.44 years |
| 15 October 1974 |
| 1,281 |
| 5.341 AU |
| 1.603 AU |
| 3.472 AU |
| 0.53829 |
| 6.469 years |
| 30.466° |
| 84.109° |
| 359.95° |
| 124.62° |
| 13 April 202626 October 2019 |
| 22 September 2032 |
| 2.685 |
| 0.617 AU |
| 0.049 AU |
| 0.62 km (0.39 mi) |
| 6.6±1.0 hours |
| 15.4 |
| 17.2 |
76P/West–Kohoutek–Ikemura is a Jupiter-family periodic comet in the Solar System with a current orbital period of 6.47 years.
The comet was initially spotted on a photographic plate by Richard M. West at the European Southern Observatory Sky Atlas Laboratory, Geneva in January 1975, when it had a brightness of magnitude 12. Inability to predict its movement from a single image meant the comet had to be presumed lost.
In late February it was accidentally rediscovered by Lubos Kohoutek at the Hamburg Observatory, Germany and independently on 1 March by Toshihiko Ikemura in Shinshiro, Japan. After further observations the comet's parabolic orbit was computed, which gave a perihelion date of 23 March 1975. It was demonstrated that all three sightings were of the same object, which was accordingly designated 76P/West–Kohoutek–Ikemura.
The comet has been observed at its successive returns in 1987, 1993, 2000, 2006 and 2013.
Further calculations by Brian G. Marsden determined the comet's elliptical orbit and revealed that it had passed only 0.012 AU (1.8 million km) from Jupiter on 22 March 1972. This close approach had reduced its orbital frequency from some 30 years to the current 6.48 years and its perihelion distance from 4.78 AU to 1.60 AU.
Its nucleus is estimated to have an effective radius of 0.31 ± 0.01 kilometers and its rotational period is estimated to be 6.6±1.0 hours.
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List of numbered comets
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76P/West–Kohoutek–Ikemura at the JPL Small-Body Database
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76P/West-Kohoutek-Ikemura at Seiichi Yoshida's website
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76P/West-Kohoutek-Ikemura at Gideon van Buitenen's website
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