P 2014 E1 LARSON




Animation : 3x(15x120s)
COMET P/2014 E1 (LARSON)
Stephen M. Larson, Lunar and Planetary
Laboratory, University of Arizona,
reports his discovery of a comet on CCD
images taken with the Catalina Sky
Survey's 0.68-m Schmidt telescope
(discovery astrometry tabulated below), the
object having a 20" coma and a
40" tail in p.a. 280 deg.
2014 UT R.A. (2000) Decl.
Mag. Observer
Mar. 10.44839 14 37 43.36 - 6 17 26.7 16.8
Larson
10.45571 14 37 43.48 - 6 17 29.6 17.0 "
10.46305 14 37 43.58 - 6 17 33.7 17.0 "
10.47037 14 37
43.57 - 6 17 36.3 16.8 "
After posting on the Minor Planet
Center's PCCP webpage, other CCD
astrometrists have commented on the object's
cometary appearance. H. Sato,
Tokyo, Japan, writes that eight stacked 60-s
exposures taken remotely with a
0.32-m f/8 astrograph at the RAS Observatory
near Nerpio, Spain on Mar. 11.15
UT reveal a strongly condensed coma of
diameter 25" and a fan-like tail 40"
long toward p.a. 245-315 degrees; also,
eight stacked 60-s images taken by
Sato remotely with an iTelescope 0.43-m
f/6.8 astrograph near Mayhill, NM,
U.S.A., on Mar. 11.47 show a strongly
condensed coma 25" in diameter and a 2'
fan-like tail toward p.a. 245-310
degrees. Fifteen stacked 2-min images
obtained by D. T. Durig, E. W.
Benjamin, C. C. Fisher, and N. J. Gideon with a
0.3-m f/2.5
Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope at Sewanee, TN, U.S.A., on Mar. 11.3
show a
diffuse object with a 45" tail in p.a. 280-285 deg. William H.
Ryan
(Magdalena Ridge Observatory, 2.4-m f/8.9 reflector + R-band filter;
Mar.
11.4) notes a distinct coma and a tail in p.a. about 290 deg. G.
Hug
(Scranton, KS, U.S.A.; 0.56-m reflector; Mar. 11.4) measures a tail in
p.a.
about 290 deg whose first 20" is bright but with a fainter extension
to
about 40". R. Ligustri (Udine, Italy) finds a tail about 30" long in
p.a.
294 deg in four 180-s images taken with an iTelescope 0.50-m f/4.5
reflector
near Mayhill on Mar. 11.45-11.46. J.-F. Soulier, Maisoncelles,
Seine et
Marne, France, reports that forty 120-s unfiltered images taken with
a 0.3-m
f/3.8 Newtonian reflector on Mar. 11.1-11.2 show a 19" coma and a 1'
tail
in p.a. 285 deg. T. Prystavski writes that six 180-s images taken by
A.
Novichonok with a 0.61-m f/6.5 astrograph at the Sierra Remote
Observatory
(Auberry, CA, USA; with Luminance filter; Mar. 11.35-11.36)
reveal a 0'.4
tail in p.a. 296 deg. L. Buzzi (Varese, Italy; 0.60-m f/4.64
reflector;
Mar. 12.14-12.16) finds a sharp central condensation with a coma
14" wide and
a broad tail at least 35" long centered at p.a. 290
deg.
The available astrometry (including pre-discovery Catalina
observations
from Jan. 21), the following elliptical orbital elements by G.
V. Williams,
and an ephemeris appear on MPEC 2014-E78.
Epoch = 2014 May 23.0 TT
T = 2014 May 24.4903 TT Peri. =
186.8642
e = 0.419481
Node = 38.9975 2000.0
q = 2.132729 AU Incl. = 16.0031
a = 3.673833 AU n
= 0.1399668 P = 7.04 years
NOTE: These 'Central Bureau
Electronic Telegrams' are sometimes
superseded by text appearing later
in the printed IAU Circulars.
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