12P/Pons–Brooks
0 sources
12P/Pons–Brooks
Summary
12P/Pons–Brooks is a periodic comet[1]. 12P/Pons–Brooks ranks in the top 3% of periodic_comet entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (59 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 12P/Pons–Brooks is credited with the discovery of William Robert Brooks[3].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks is credited with the discovery of Jean-Louis Pons[4].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's image is recorded as Pons brooks.jpg[5].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's instance of is recorded as periodic comet[6].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's instance of is recorded as Halley-type comet[7].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's instance of is recorded as near-Earth object[8].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's site of astronomical discovery is recorded as Marseille[9].
- William Robert Brooks is named after 12P/Pons–Brooks[10].
- Jean-Louis Pons is named after 12P/Pons–Brooks[11].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's Commons category is recorded as 12P/Pons–Brooks[12].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's parent astronomical body is recorded as Sun[13].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 12P/1953 M1[14].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 1954 VII[15].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 12P/1883 R1[16].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 1884 I[17].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 12P/1812 O1[18].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 1812[19].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 12P/1457 A1[20].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 12P/1385 U1[21].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 1883b[22].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's provisional designation is recorded as 1953c[23].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1812-07-21T00:00:00Z[24].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02fnn1[25].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's JPL Small-Body Database SPK-ID is recorded as 1000068[26].
- 12P/Pons–Brooks's significant event is recorded as perihelion[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Credited discoveries include William Robert Brooks[3], an astronomer[28], 1844–1921[29], of United States[30], awarded the Lalande Prize[31] and Jean-Louis Pons[4], an astronomer[32], 1761–1831[33], of Kingdom of France[34], awarded the Lalande Prize[35], specialised in astronomy[36].
Why It Matters
12P/Pons–Brooks ranks in the top 3% of periodic_comet entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (59 views/month).[2] 12P/Pons–Brooks has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[37] 12P/Pons–Brooks is known by 19 alternative names across languages and contexts.[38]