C/1865 B1 (Great Southern Comet of 1865) was a non-periodic comet, which in 1865 was so bright that it was visible to unaided-eye observations in the Southern Hemisphere. The comet could not be seen from the Northern Hemisphere.

C/1865 B1
Discovery
Discovered byFrancis Abbott
Discovery date17 January 1865
Designations
Great Southern Comet of 1865
1865 I
Orbital characteristics[1][2]
Epoch14 January 1865 (JD 2402251.3253)
Observation arc102 days
Number of
observations
198
Perihelion0.025844 AU
Eccentricity~1.000
Inclination92.4945°
254.825°
Argument of
periapsis
111.717°
Last perihelion14 January 1865

Discovery and observations

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Brazilian political cartoon from February 1865 stating that the comet, usually a harbinger of war, was actually going to Paris to escape the Uruguayan and Paraguayan Wars Brazil was fighting at the time.

The comet was a naked-eye discovery on January 17 by Francis Abbott in Hobart, Tasmania. The comet was independently discovered by Robert L. J. Ellery in Melbourne and observers in South Africa, Chile and Brazil. In addition to Abbott and Ellery, John Tebbutt in Windsor, New South Wales, Carl Wilhelm Moesta (1825–1884)[3] in Santiago, C. C. Copsey in São João del Rei,[4] and William Mann (1817–1873)[5] at the Cape of Good Hope made telescope observations of this comet. At the first observations, the comet’s tail had a length of from 10° to 12°.

Before its discovery, the comet reached its perihelion and its closest approach to planet Earth. From its discovery and through the end of January the comet was visible, in the Southern Hemisphere, to the naked eye. Ellery in Melbourne described the comet as “not nearly so bright” as Donati’s Comet. The maximum length reported for the tail was 25° on January 21. At the end of January the tail's length was about 17°.

In the Southern Hemisphere, the comet was visible to the naked eye for the entire month of February. At the beginning of March, the tail was barely ½° and soon the comet could be observed only by telescope. William Mann at the Cape of Good Hope successfully observed the comet through April and until May 2.[6]

On 24 January, the comet reached its maximum brightness of magnitude 1.[7]

Orbit

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Using observations of the comet over 102 days, Felix Körber was able to calculate only a parabolic orbit, inclined to the ecliptic by about 92°.[2] The comet reached its perihelion of approximately 0.026 AU on January 14 and then on January 15 its closest approach to planet Earth of approximately 0.94 AU. On January 16 the comet passed by Venus at a distance of approximately 0.67 AU.[8]

Tebbutt's summary

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In the section of his Astronomical Memoirs entitled 1865, Tebbutt wrote:[9]

In January of this year a brilliant comet appeared, which, from its position, could not be seen in the northern hemisphere. It was observed at five stations only, namely, Cape of Good Hope, Melbourne, Port de France, Santiago, and Windsor. It was observed at Windsor with the 314 inch telescope from January 30 to March 23, and the observations, with the derived orbit elements, were forwarded to Europe. The most remarkable feature in the orbit of this comet is the smallness of the perihelion distance, for my other observations showed that the comet passed its perihelion on the morning of January 15, at a distance of only two and a half millions of miles from the sun; its perihelion velocity was enormous and by January 30, when first seen by me, it had receded to a distance of 63 millions of miles from that luminary and 114 millions of miles from the earth, and its visible tail had a length of 35 millions of miles. Approximate orbits for this body were calculated by Hind, Kulcycky,[10][11] Moesta, Tebbutt, and White, and all the publications were employed by Dr. Koerber of Breslau in 1887; in a definitive determination, which formed the subject of an inaugural dissertation read by him before the University of that city on the occasion of his taking the degree of doctor of philosophy. The provisional orbit elements adopted for the discussion were those obtained at Windsor and the final correction was small.

References

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  1. ^ G. W. Kronk (2003). "Körber's orbit calculation". Cometography: A Catalog of Comets. Vol. 2: 1800–1899. Cambridge University Press. p. 338. ISBN 0-521-58505-8.
  2. ^ a b "C/1865 B1 – JPL Small-Body Database Browser". ssd.jpl.nasa.gov. Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 2 November 2024.
  3. ^ L. D. Schmadel (2012). "(9334) Moesta". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Springer-Verlag. p. 683. ISBN 978-3-642-29718-2.
  4. ^ C. C. Copsey (1866). "The Large Comet visible in the Southern Hemisphere". Memoirs of the Royal Astronomical Society. 34 (Quarto Volume for the session 1864–1865). London, UK: 174–176.
  5. ^ "Obituary: William Mann". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 34 (4): 144–148. 13 February 1874. Bibcode:1874MNRAS..34..144.. doi:10.1093/mnras/34.4.144.
  6. ^ G. W. Kronk (2003). "C/1865 B1 (Great Southern Comet)". Cometography: A Catalog of Comets. Vol. 2: 1800–1899. Cambridge University Press. pp. 335–338. ISBN 0-521-58505-8.
  7. ^ D. K. Yeomans. "Great Comets in History". ssd.jpl.nasa.gov. Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 2 November 2024.
  8. ^ A. Vitagliano. "SOLEX 11.0". Archived from the original on 20 December 2008.
  9. ^ J. Tebbutt (1908). "1865". Astronomical Memoirs. Sydney, Australia. pp. 31–32.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (Note that 2.5 million miles = .02689 AU; compare this perihelion value with the perihelion of Halley's comet at .586 AU.)
  10. ^ V. F. Polcaro; R. Viotti (1993). "A Forgotten Episode of the η Carinae light curve in 1860–1865". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 274: 807–810. arXiv:astro-ph/9305024. Bibcode:1993A&A...274..807P. The surname "Kulcycky" seems to be a misspelling of the surname of A. Kulczycky.
  11. ^ Connaissance des temps. 1865. Tebbutt seems to have intended a reference to Adam Kulczycky.