Infrared image of Comet Heinze taken byNEOWISE on 9 January 2018 | |
| Discovery[1][2] | |
|---|---|
| Discovered by | Aren N. Heinze |
| Discovery site | ATLAS–MLO (T08) |
| Discovery date | 2 October 2017 |
| Designations | |
| CK17T010[2] | |
| Orbital characteristics[3] | |
| Epoch | 14 December 2017 (JD 2458101.5) |
| Observation arc | 262 days |
| Earliestprecovery date | 28 September 2017 |
| Number of observations | 1,005 |
| Perihelion | 0.581 AU |
| Eccentricity | 1.00034 |
| Inclination | 96.83° |
| 102.32° | |
| Argument of periapsis | 96.92° |
| Last perihelion | 21 February 2018 |
| EarthMOID | 0.014 AU |
| JupiterMOID | 3.032 AU |
| Physical characteristics[4] | |
| Comet total magnitude (M1) | 11.9 |
| Comet nuclear magnitude (M2) | 17.0 |
| 8.2 (2017 apparition) | |
C/2017 T1 (Heinze) is ahyperbolic comet that passed closest to Earth on 4 January 2018 at a distance of 0.22 AU (33 million km).[5]
It was discovered on 2 October 2017 by Aren N. Heinze of theUniversity of Hawaiʻi, using the 0.5-mSchmidt telescope at theMauna Loa Observatory used for theAsteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS).[1][6]Perihelion was reached on 21 February 2018, and it was expected peak magnitude about 8.8.[7] However, this intrinsically faint comet began to disintegrate around this time.[8][9] It was last observed as a dim 16th-magnitude object on 23 April 2018.[4]
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