36P/Whipple
[upwards] [9p] [10p] [17p] [19p] [21p] [29p] [30P] [33p] [36p] [41p] [45p] [47p] [57p] [59p] [65p] [67p] [71p] [73p] [74p] [77p] [81p] [94p] [103p] [116p] [118p] [123p] [127p] [141p] [144p] [157p] [169p] [173p] [176p] [183p] [204p] [211p] [217p] [221p] [223p] [230p] [232p] [236p] [p2010e2] [240p] [247p] [255p] [304p] [318p] [324P] [p2011c2] [p2010wk] [p2010h2] [p2010a3] [p2010a2] [p2010a1] [p2009y2] [p2009q4] [p2008o2] [p2008qp20] [p2008j3]
Discovered by
Fred L. Whipple (
Harvard College Observatory, Massachusetts, USA)
on
October,15 1933
The
latest IAU telegrams or the
latest CBET's.
IAUC
Astronomical Headlines.
Minor
planet center's orbital elements and Ephemeris,
The comet on
Seiichi Yoshida's Homepage,
Gary W. Kronk's Cometography
Light
curves on Cometas Obs,
JPL Small body
database
The very faint comet is showing a short tail of 11" in PA
130.
36P/Whipple �
by Bernhard Haeusler, 2011-09-30 B/W
111 min. exposure,
2011-09-30 UT 02:47, 12" SCT
f-6.5 + CCD ST10XME
17.82 mag, coma: 11.5", tail: 21.5" in PA 261�
Actually with the best oberservation conditions.
Table generated with
Orbitas, a program of
Comatas_Obs
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