Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/58P/Jackson–Neujmin> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 50 of
50
with 100 triples per page.
- Jackson–Neujmin abstract "58P/Jackson–Neujmin is a periodic comet in the Solar System with a current orbital period of 8.19 years.The comet was discovered on a photographic plate on 20 September 1936 by Cyril Jackson of the Union Observatory, South Africa, who described it as faint and diffuse, with a brightness of magnitude 12. On the following day Grigory N. Neujmin of the Simeis Observatory, in Crimea, Russia discovered it independently. Fernand Rigaux of the Royal Observatory in Uccle, Belgium then also found it on an earlier photographic plate exposed on 9 September 1936.The predicted 1945 apparition was not observed due to uncertainty about its position and appearance date and even Elizabeth Roemer was unable to find it in 1953. 1961 was again very difficult but Charles Kowal managed to relocate it in September, 1970. The 1995 appearance was more favourable and brightness reached a magnitude of 10.It was last observed in September, 2009.".
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageID "45472613".
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageLength "2254".
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageRevisionID "706550629".
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Astronomical_objects_discovered_in_1936.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Comets.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Category:Periodic_comets.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Charles_T._Kowal.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Comet.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Cyril_Jackson_(astronomer).
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Elizabeth_Roemer.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Fernand_Rigaux.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Grigory_Neujmin.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Julian_year_(astronomy).
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink List_of_numbered_comets.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink List_of_periodic_comets.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Observatory_of_Belgium.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Simeiz_Observatory.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Solar_System.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLink Union_Observatory.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageWikiLinkText "58P/Jackson–Neujmin".
- Jackson–Neujmin aphelion "6.779".
- Jackson–Neujmin discoverer "Cyril Jackson at Union Observatory, South Africa and Grigory N. Neujmin at Simeis Observatory, Russia".
- Jackson–Neujmin discoveryDate "--09-20".
- Jackson–Neujmin eccentricity "0.5531".
- Jackson–Neujmin epoch "2014".
- Jackson–Neujmin inclination "13.52".
- Jackson–Neujmin lastP "2012".
- Jackson–Neujmin name "58".
- Jackson–Neujmin nextP "2020".
- Jackson–Neujmin perihelion "1.3683".
- Jackson–Neujmin period "2.58456744E8".
- Jackson–Neujmin semimajor "4.0625".
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Comet-stub.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Comets.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_Comet.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:PeriodicComets_Navigator.
- Jackson–Neujmin wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Jackson–Neujmin subject Category:Astronomical_objects_discovered_in_1936.
- Jackson–Neujmin subject Category:Comets.
- Jackson–Neujmin subject Category:Periodic_comets.
- Jackson–Neujmin hypernym Comet.
- Jackson–Neujmin type Planet.
- Jackson–Neujmin comment "58P/Jackson–Neujmin is a periodic comet in the Solar System with a current orbital period of 8.19 years.The comet was discovered on a photographic plate on 20 September 1936 by Cyril Jackson of the Union Observatory, South Africa, who described it as faint and diffuse, with a brightness of magnitude 12. On the following day Grigory N. Neujmin of the Simeis Observatory, in Crimea, Russia discovered it independently.".
- Jackson–Neujmin label "58P/Jackson–Neujmin".
- Jackson–Neujmin sameAs Q19597615.
- Jackson–Neujmin sameAs Q19597615.
- Jackson–Neujmin wasDerivedFrom Jackson–Neujmin?oldid=706550629.
- Jackson–Neujmin isPrimaryTopicOf Jackson–Neujmin.