'Comet Encke' (officially designated '2P/Encke') is a periodic
comet, named after
Johann Franz Encke, who through laborious study of its
orbit and many calculations was able to link multiple observations in
1786 (2P/1786 B1),
1795 (2P/1795 V1),
1805 (2P/1805 U1) and
1818 (2P/1818 W1) to the same object. In
1819 he published his conclusions in the journal ''
Correspondance astronomique'', and predicted correctly its return in
1822 (2P/1822 L1).
As its official designation implies, Encke's Comet was the second periodic comet discovered after
Halley's Comet (a.k.a.
1P/Halley). It is unusual in that it was named after the person who calculated its orbit rather than the person who discovered it (
Pierre Méchain).
Some consider the Bronze Age breakup of an originally larger comet of which Comet Encke is a member to be responsible for
ancient destruction in the
Fertile Crescent, perhaps evidenced by a large (unconfirmed)
meteor crater in
Iraq (Identified as Umm al Biinni lake
[1]). The
origin of the swastika has also been connected with Comet Encke.
The failed
CONTOUR mission was launched to study this comet, as well as
Schwassmann-Wachmann 3.
Meteor Showers
Comet Encke is believed to be the originator of several related
meteor showers - the
Taurids, which are encountered as the ''Northern'' and ''Southern''
Taurids across November, and the ''Beta Taurids'', in late June and early July
[2]. (See also
Whipple, 1940; Klačka, 1999).
Comet core parameters
Diameter: 1–3
km
Discovery
See the biography of
Johann Franz Encke.
References
★ Klačka, Jozef (1999). "Meteor Streams of Comet Encke. Taurid Meteor Complex".
Abstract
★ Whipple, F.L. (1940). "Photographic meteor studies. III. The Taurid shower." ''Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc.,'' '83,' 711-745.
★ Master, S. and Woldai, T. (2004) The UMM Al Binni structure in the Mesopotamian marshlands of Southern Iraq, as a postulated late holocene meteorite impact crater : geological setting and new LANDSAT ETM + and Aster satellite imagery. Johannesburg, University of Witwatersrand, Economic Geology Research Institute (EGRI), 2004. EGRI - HALL : information circular 382, p. 21
★ Master, S. and Woldai, T. (2004) Umm al Binni structure, southern Iraq, as a postulated late holocene meteorite impact crater : new satellite imagery and proposals for future research. Presented at the ICSU workshop : comet - asteroid impacts and human society, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain, November 27- December 2, 2004. p. 20
★ Hamacher, D. W. (2005) "The Umm Al Binni Structure and Bronze Age Catastrophes", ''The Artifact: Publications of the El Paso Archaeological Society'', Vol. 43
★ Hamacher, D. W. (2006) "Umm al Binni lake: Effects of a possible Holocene bolide impact", ''Astronomical Society of Australia Meeting'' 40, #15
External links
★
Gary W. Kronk's Cometography page for 2P
★
Comets and the Bronze Age Collapse