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What percentage of known comets orbit the sun along(or nearly along) the
ecliptic? Along the same lines--what areas of the sky do comet hunters focus on in searching from the Northern Hemisphere? Thanks, tM |
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If you mean have orbits that line up along the ecliptic as the planets so,
practically none, meaning the vast majority of discovered comets have orbits tilted in every direction. -- Sincerely, --- Dave ---------------------------------------------------------------------- It don't mean a thing unless it has that certain "je ne sais quoi" Duke Ellington ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "themeanies" wrote in message ... What percentage of known comets orbit the sun along(or nearly along) the ecliptic? Along the same lines--what areas of the sky do comet hunters focus on in searching from the Northern Hemisphere? Thanks, tM |
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On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 20:45:51 -0600, themeanies
wrote: What percentage of known comets orbit the sun along(or nearly along) the ecliptic? The graph (Fig. F5) on page 205 of "The Cambridge Guide to Astronomical Discovery" (1992, by William Liller) shows the inclinations of the orbits of all comets with well-determined orbits. The bar graph uses different cross-hatching for long-period and short-period comets. The short-period comets show a definite and strong preference toward zero degrees. The long-period comets are more numerous at inclinations from 45 to 155 degrees than they are from 0 to 40 degrees. Along the same lines--what areas of the sky do comet hunters focus on in searching from the Northern Hemisphere? Before the automated search programs (such as LINEAR), comet hunters concentrated their searches in the dark sky nearest the sun -- just after the end of evening twilight and just before morning twilight. Odds were somewhat better in the morning sky. After the advent of the automated search programs . . . I'm less knowledgeable; but IIRC Don Machholz has mentioned that he checks for the areas not yet covered by the automated searches and makes those areas a priority. (In the realm of comet hunting it's always been advisable to know your competition.) By the way, there are many more graphs and other information relating to comet discovery in Liller's book. Despite the HUGE effects the automated programs now have on comet hunting and discovery, I think you would find Liller's book useful. Who knows, one of these cold, dark nights I may return to my own old, moldy, comet-hunting program. OTOH, when I make sketches during an observing session I tend to return indoors with something to show for my time under the stars ;-) Sketcher To sketch is to see. |
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![]() Before the automated search programs (such as LINEAR), comet hunters concentrated their searches in the dark sky nearest the sun -- just after the end of evening twilight and just before morning twilight. Odds were somewhat better in the morning sky. After the advent of the automated search programs . . . I'm less knowledgeable; but IIRC Don Machholz has mentioned that he checks for the areas not yet covered by the automated searches and makes those areas a priority. (In the realm of comet hunting it's always been advisable to know your competition.) By the way, there are many more graphs and other information relating to comet discovery in Liller's book. Despite the HUGE effects the automated programs now have on comet hunting and discovery, I think you would find Liller's book useful. Who knows, one of these cold, dark nights I may return to my own old, moldy, comet-hunting program. OTOH, when I make sketches during an observing session I tend to return indoors with something to show for my time under the stars ;-) Sketcher To sketch is to see. What a fantastic response. Thank You. tM |
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Sketcher wrote:
The long-period comets are more numerous at inclinations from 45 to 155 degrees than they are from 0 to 40 degrees. Do you mean per degree density of comets, or cumulatively? Brian Tung The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.txt |
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Sketcher wrote:
On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 20:45:51 -0600, themeanies wrote: snip [Stekcher] [b]ut IIRC Don Machholz has mentioned that he checks for the areas not yet covered by the automated searches and makes those areas a priority. How does one determine what areas are currently covered by automated searches? - Canopus56 |
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On 16 Jan 2005 18:53:43 -0800, "canopus56"
wrote: How does one determine what areas are currently covered by automated searches? - Canopus56 It's my understanding that the following link can be used for this purpose: http://scully.harvard.edu/~cgi/SkyCoverage.html Sketcher To sketch is to see. |
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