80P/Peters–Hartley
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80P/Peters–Hartley
Summary
80P/Peters–Hartley is a periodic comet[1]. 80P/Peters–Hartley draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (periodic_comet category, ranking #28 of 183).[2]
Key Facts
- 80P/Peters–Hartley is credited with the discovery of Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters[3].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's instance of is recorded as periodic comet[4].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's instance of is recorded as Jupiter-family comet[5].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's site of astronomical discovery is recorded as Astronomical Observatory of Capodimonte[6].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's parent astronomical body is recorded as Sun[7].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's provisional designation is recorded as 1990d[8].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's provisional designation is recorded as 80P/1982 N1[9].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's provisional designation is recorded as 1982h[10].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's provisional designation is recorded as 80P/1846 M1[11].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's provisional designation is recorded as 1846 VI[12].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1846-06-26T00:00:00Z[13].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/012wj822[14].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's JPL Small-Body Database SPK-ID is recorded as 1000067[15].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's orbital eccentricity is recorded as {'amount': '+0.5993980769227218'}[16].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's absolute magnitude is recorded as {'amount': '+11.8'}[17].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's orbital inclination is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28390', 'amount': '+29.93031930287708'}[18].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's orbital period is recorded as {'unit': 'Q573', 'amount': '+2947.780229921842'}[19].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's longitude of ascending node is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28390', 'amount': '+259.8459665252867'}[20].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's semi-major axis of an orbit is recorded as {'unit': 'Q1811', 'amount': '+4.023442353603911'}[21].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's apoapsis is recorded as {'unit': 'Q1811', 'amount': '+6.435085962963525'}[22].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's periapsis is recorded as {'unit': 'Q1811', 'amount': '+1.611798744244297'}[23].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's argument of periapsis is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28390', 'amount': '+339.1634123560768'}[24].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's mean anomaly is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28390', 'amount': '+105.7289165812836'}[25].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's NAIF ID is recorded as 1000067[26].
- 80P/Peters–Hartley's epoch is recorded as March 25, 2017[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
80P/Peters–Hartley is credited with the discovery of Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters[3].
Why It Matters
80P/Peters–Hartley draws 7 Wikipedia views per month (periodic_comet category, ranking #28 of 183).[2] 80P/Peters–Hartley has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]