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- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann abstract "Comet 29P/Schwassmann–Wachmann, also known as Schwassmann–Wachmann 1, was discovered on November 15, 1927, by Arnold Schwassmann and Arno Arthur Wachmann at the Hamburg Observatory in Bergedorf, Germany. It was discovered photographically, when the comet was in outburst and the magnitude was about 13. Precovery images of the comet from March 4, 1902, were found in 1931 and showed the comet at 12th magnitude.The comet is unusual in that while normally hovering at around 16th magnitude, it suddenly undergoes an outburst. This causes the comet to brighten by 1 to 4 magnitudes. This happens with a frequency of 7.3 outbursts per year, fading within a week or two. The magnitude of the comet has been known to vary from 19th magnitude to 9th magnitude, a ten thousand-fold increase in brightness, during its brightest outbursts. Highly changing surface processes are suspected to be responsible for the observed behavior.The comet is thought to be a member of a relatively new class of objects called "centaurs", of which at least 80 are known. These are small icy bodies with orbits between those of Jupiter and Neptune. Astronomers believe that centaurs are recent escapees from the Kuiper belt, a zone of small bodies orbiting in a cloud at the distant reaches of the Solar System. Frequent perturbations by Jupiter will likely accumulate and cause the comet to migrate either inward or outward by the year 4000.The dust and gas comprising the comet's nucleus is part of the same primordial materials from which the Sun and planets were formed billions of years ago. The complex carbon-rich molecules they contain may have provided some of the raw materials from which life originated on Earth.The comet nucleus is estimated to be 30.8 kilometers in diameter.".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann thumbnail 29P_Schwassmann_Wachmann.jpg?width=300.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann wikiPageExternalLink 44340.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann wikiPageExternalLink PIA04943.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann wikiPageExternalLink horizons.cgi?find_body=1&body_group=sb&sstr=29P.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann wikiPageExternalLink sbdb.cgi?sstr=29P;orb=1.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann wikiPageExternalLink 8660720639.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann wikiPageID "447858".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann wikiPageRevisionID "642993232".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann align "left".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann alt "Comet 29P photographed at Ka-Dar Observatory".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann alt "The quasi-circular orbit of 29P/Schwassmann–Wachmann compared to Jupiter and Saturn".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann aphelion "6.25".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann caption "Comet 29P photographed at Ka-Dar Observatory".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann caption "The quasi-circular orbit of 29P/Schwassmann–Wachmann compared to Jupiter and Saturn".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann designations "1908".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann designations "1957".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann dimensions "30.8".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann direction "horizontal".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann discoverer Friedrich_Karl_Arnold_Schwassmann.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann discoverer "Arno Arthur Wachmann".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann discoveryDate "1927-11-15".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann eccentricity "0.0441".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann epoch "2006-03-06".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann hasPhotoCollection Schwassmann–Wachmann.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann image "29".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann inclination "9.3903".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann lastP "2004-07-10".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann name "29".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann nextP "2019-03-07".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann perihelion "5.722".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann period "14.65".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann semimajor "5.986".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann width "320".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann width "450".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann subject Category:Astronomical_objects_discovered_in_1927.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann subject Category:Centaurs_(minor_planets).
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann subject Category:Comets.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann subject Category:Discoveries_by_Friedrich_Karl_Arnold_Schwassmann.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann subject Category:Periodic_comets.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann comment "Comet 29P/Schwassmann–Wachmann, also known as Schwassmann–Wachmann 1, was discovered on November 15, 1927, by Arnold Schwassmann and Arno Arthur Wachmann at the Hamburg Observatory in Bergedorf, Germany. It was discovered photographically, when the comet was in outburst and the magnitude was about 13.".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann label "29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 1".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann label "29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann label "29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann label "29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann label "29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann label "29P/Schwassmann–Wachmann".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann label "29P/Швассмана — Вахмана".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann label "シュワスマン・ワハマン第1彗星".
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann sameAs m.029m4_.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann wasDerivedFrom Schwassmann–Wachmann?oldid=642993232.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann depiction 29P_Schwassmann_Wachmann.jpg.
- Schwassmann%E2%80%93Wachmann isPrimaryTopicOf Schwassmann–Wachmann.