Great Comet
of 1811
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Discovery
The comet was discovered March 25,
1811 by Honoré Flaugergues at 2.7 AU from the sun in the now-defunct constellation of Argo Navis.
After being obscured for several days by moonlight, it was also found by Jean-Louis Pons
on April 11, while Franz
Xaver, Baron Von Zach was able to confirm Flaugergues'
discovery the same night.[1]
The first provisional orbit was
computed in June by Johann Karl Burckhardt. Based on these calculations, Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus Olbers
made a prediction that the comet would go on to become extremely bright later
that year.
Observations
From May to August, the comet's
position made it difficult to spot because of its low altitude and the evening
twilight. Both Flaugergues and Olbers were able to recover it in Leo Minor
during August, Olbers noting a small but distinct tail, consisting of two rays
forming a parabola, when viewing through a comet seeker.[1]
By September, in Ursa Major, it was becoming a conspicuous object in the evening sky as
it approached perihelion: William Herschel noted that a tail 25° long had developed by October 6.
By January 1812, the comet's
brightness had faded. Several astronomers continued to obtain telescopic
observations for some months, the last being Vincent Wisniewski at Novocherkassk,
who noted it as barely reaching an apparent magnitude of 11 by August 12.[1]
The Great Comet of 1811 was thought
to have had an exceptionally large coma, perhaps reaching over 1 million miles
across—fifty percent larger than the Sun.[2]
The comet's nucleus was later estimated at 30–40 km
in diameter[3]
and the orbital period was calculated at 3,757 years (later adjusted to 3,065
years). In many ways the comet was quite similar to Comet Hale-Bopp:
it became spectacular without passing particularly close to either the Earth or the Sun, but had an extremely large and
active nucleus.
Allusions
in culture
The Great Comet of 1811 seems to
have had a particular impact on non-astronomers. The artists John Linnell and William Blake
both witnessed it, the former producing several sketches and the latter
possibly incorporating it in his famous panel The Ghost of a Flea.[4]
At the midpoint of War and Peace, Tolstoy describes the character of Pierre
observing this "enormous and brilliant comet [...] which was said to
portend all kinds of woes and the end of the world". The comet was
popularly thought to have portended Napoleon's
invasion of Russia (even being referred to as
"Napoleon's Comet")[5]
and the War of 1812, among other events.
The year 1811 turned out to be
particularly fine for wine production, and merchants marketed 'Comet Wine'
at high prices for many years afterwards. The film Year Of The Comet, a 1992 romantic comedy adventure film, is based on this
premise and tells the story of the pursuit of a contemporarily discovered
bottle of wine from the year of the Great Comet bottled for Napoleon. The film
stars Penelope Ann Miller, Tim Daly and French film legend Louis Jourdan
(his last film before retiring to the south of France, which is known for its
wine making).[6]
Astronomers also found the comet a
memorable sight. William Henry Smyth, comparing his recollections of the Great Comet of 1811 to
the spectacular Donati's Comet, stated that "as a mere sight-object, the
branched tail was of greater interest, the nucleus with its 'head-veil' was
more distinct, and its circumpolarity
was a fortunate incident for gazers".[7]
The entire wiki link can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Comet_of_1811
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