C/1964 N1 (Ikeya)
{{short description|Long-period comet}}
{{For|other comets discovered by Kaoru Ikeya|Comet Ikeya}}
{{Infobox comet
| name = C/1964 N1 (Ikeya)
| image = Comet Ikeya 1964f.jpg
| caption = Comet Ikeya (1964f) photographed by Dennis Milon on 27 July 1964
| discovery_ref =
| discoverer = Kaoru Ikeya
| discoverery_site =
| discovery_date = 3 July 1964
| mpc_name =
| designations = 1964f
| epoch = 1964-Jul-28.0
| observation_arc = 56 days
| earliest_precovery_date =
| obs = 36
| orbit =
| aphelion = 110.97 AU
| perihelion = 0.822 AU
| semimajor = 55.90 AU
| eccentricity = 0.9853
| period = 418 years
| inclination = 171.92°
| asc_node = 269.95°
| arg_peri = 290.77°
| tjup =
| Earth_moid = 0.041 AU
| Jupiter_moid = 0.267 AU
| physical_ref =
| M1 =
| M2 = 16.0
| magnitude = 2.7
(1964 apparition)
| last_p = 1 August 1964
| next_p =
}}
C/1964 N1 (Ikeya), also known as Comet 1964f, is a long-period comet discovered by Kaoru Ikeya on 3 July 1964. The comet last passed perihelion on 1 August 1964, when it reached an apparent magnitude of 2.7.{{cite web |title=Brightest comets seen since 1935 |url=http://www.icq.eps.harvard.edu/brightest.html |website=www.icq.eps.harvard.edu |access-date=9 March 2023}}
Observational history
The comet was discovered by the Japanese amateur astronomer Kaoru Ikeya on 3 July 1964. It was the second comet discovered by Kaoru Ikeya, after C/1963 A1. The comet was located in the morning sky, in the constellation of Taurus, at the star cluster Hyades, and had an estimated apparent magnitude of 8. The comet was moving southeast.{{cite journal |last1=Roemer |first1=Elizabeth |title=COMET NOTES |journal=Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific |date=August 1964 |volume=76 |issue=451 |pages=262–265 |doi=10.1086/128098 |jstor=40674156 |s2cid=250807386 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40674156 |issn=0004-6280|doi-access=free }}
The comet brightened during July and was observed with the naked eye on July 19 by Jim Young from the Table Mountain Observatory. It reached perihelion on 1 August 1964. By 6 August it was visible by naked eye while it passed 1-2° from Rigel. After that it was difficult to observe, being located in the morning twilight. The closest approach to Earth was on August 12, at a distance of about {{convert|0.2|AU|e6km e6mi|abbr=unit|lk=off}} and at a solar elongation of 31°. On August 15 the comet was reported by S. Archer from Australia to have a magnitude of 2.8 and its tail to be 4.5 degrees long. The comet became visible from the northern hemisphere in the evening sky in late August, located low, near the horizon, and had faded noticeably.{{cite journal |last1=Roemer |first1=Elizabeth |title=COMET NOTES |journal=Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific |date=October 1964 |volume=76 |issue=452 |pages=358–361 |doi=10.1086/128114 |jstor=40676862 |s2cid=250884644 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40676862 |issn=0004-6280|url-access=subscription }}{{cite journal |last1=Milon |first1=D. |title=A.L.P.O. Comets Section Report: Comet Ikeya 1964f |journal=Strolling Astronomer |date=1 December 1965 |volume=19 |issue=3–4 |pages=37–41 |bibcode=1965StAst..19...37M |url=https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1965StAst..19...37M/abstract}}
On 2 September the comet was estimated to have a magnitude of 6.5 and by 12 September it was 8.5. The comet was last detected on 7 October 1964, when it had a magnitude of 10.4.{{cite book |last1=Kronk |first1=Gary W. |last2=Meyer |first2=Maik |last3=Seargent |first3=David Allan John |title=Cometography: Volume 5, 1960-1982: A Catalog of Comets |date=11 November 2010 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-87226-3 |pages=123–125 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qV4Q49x8PTsC |language=en}}
Scientific results
The spectrum of the comet was obtained on 29 and 30 July by the Mount Wilson Observatory and photoelectric measurements made it possible to measure the relative abundances. The spectrum revealed the presence of C2, C3, CH, and CN. The N(CH)/N(CN) and N(C3)/N(CN) were both about 0.3 in the coma near the cometary nucleus.{{cite journal |last1=Kovar |first1=N. A. |last2=Kovar |first2=R. P. |title=Photoelectric Measurements of Comet Ikeya 1964f. |journal=The Astrophysical Journal |date=October 1965 |volume=142 |pages=1191 |doi=10.1086/148388|doi-access=free }}
Meteor showers
The comet is considered to be the parent body of a number of meteor showers, as it has been modeled to create four streams that intersect with the orbit of Earth. The first meteor shower to be associated with C/1964 N1 (Ikeya) is the July ξ Arietids.{{cite journal |last1=Šegon |first1=Damir |last2=Vaubaillon |first2=Jérémie |last3=Gural |first3=Peter S. |last4=Vida |first4=Denis |last5=Andreić |first5=Željko |last6=Korlević |first6=Korado |last7=Skokić |first7=Ivica |title=Dynamical modeling validation of parent bodies associated with newly discovered CMN meteor showers |journal=Astronomy & Astrophysics |date=February 2017 |volume=598 |pages=A15 |doi=10.1051/0004-6361/201629100|s2cid=119256599 |arxiv=1611.02297 }} The comet is also considered to be the parent of body of the meteor shower ϵ-Geminids and it is also possible that it could be the parent body of ξ-Geminids. All these showers are diffuse and have few meteors.{{cite journal |last1=Neslušan |first1=L. |last2=Hajduková |first2=M. |title=Meteor showers of comet C/1964 N1 (Ikeya) |journal=Astronomy & Astrophysics |date=August 2018 |volume=616 |pages=A162 |doi=10.1051/0004-6361/201832829|s2cid=125829636 |doi-access=free }}
References
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