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255P/Levy

Periodic comet


Periodic comet

FieldValue
name255P/Levy
discovery_ref
discovererDavid H. Levy
discovery_siteJarnac Observatory ([G92](https://tools.wmflabs.org/geohack/geohack.php?params=31_58_34.28_N_110_43_6.96_W))
discovery_date2 October 2006
mpc_nameP/2006 T1
P/2011 Y1
designationsPK06T010
orbit_ref
observation_arc5,484 days (15 years)
obs590
epoch5 July 2021 (JD 2459400.5)
semimajor2.94 AU
perihelion0.846 AU
aphelion5.04 AU
eccentricity0.7126
period5.05 years
inclination13.46°
asc_node275.9°
arg_peri185.8°
tjup2.792
Earth_moid0.0088 AU (2007)
Jupiter_moid0.1539 AU (2007)
M111.5
M215.1
magnitude9.5
(2006 apparition)
last_p7 September 2022
next_p25 September 2027

P/2011 Y1 (2006 apparition)

255P/Levy, formerly P/2006 T1 and P/2011 Y1, is a Jupiter-family comet with an orbital period of 5.25 years. It last came to perihelion (closest approach to the Sun) on 14 January 2012. During the 2006 passage the comet achieved an apparent magnitude of ~9.5. Levy (PK06T010) was believed to have been recovered on 3 June 2011 at magnitude 19.8, but other observatories were unable to confirm a recovery. It was most likely a false positive because of large residuals. Levy was recovered on 17 December 2011 at magnitude 19.8, and given the second designation 2011 Y1. It was then numbered.

It came to perihelion on 14 January 2012 at a distance of 1.007 AU from the Sun. The comet passed the Earth on 2012-Jan-26 at a distance of 0.2359 AU. During the 2012 passage the comet was originally expected to reach an apparent magnitude of 7, but the comet had been in outburst in 2006 and was much dimmer than expected when it was recovered in 2011. MPC estimates after the 2011 recovery estimated that it would reach a magnitude of 17, and it had an elongation of 90°. However, CCD images showed it was diffuse and the comet's magnitude was estimated at 14.1 on 30 December 2011. The comet was not observed during the 2017 or 2022 perihelion passage. At opposition in August 2016 it would have been dimmer than magnitude 19.

255P/Levy (using an epoch of 2007) has a minimum orbit intersection distance with Earth roughly about 0.0088 AU.

The comet has been associated with α Cepheids meteor shower, which peaks on 2 January.

References

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|access-date=2014-06-20}}

|access-date=2012-01-04}}

|access-date=2012-01-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120422173100/http://severastro.narod.ru/nabl/novichonok/icq_may.txt |archive-date=2012-04-22 |url-status=dead

| display-authors= 5

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