C/1874 H1

C/1874 H1 (Coggia) is a famous non-periodic comet, which in the summer of 1874 could be seen by naked eye observation. On the basis of its brightness, the comet has been called the Great Comet of 1874; on July 13 the magnitude of the brightness was between 0 and 1.[2]

C/1874 H1 (Coggia)
Drawing of the comet C/1874 H1 (Coggia) (as seen on June 10th and July 9th, 1874
Discovery
Discovered byJérôme Eugène Coggia
Discovery date17 April 1874
Alternative
designations
Comet Coggia, 1874 III, 1874c
Orbital characteristics A
Epoch2405720.5
1874-Jul-09.3583[1]
Aphelion1144.7 AU
Perihelion0.676 AU[1]
Semi-major axis572.7 AU
Eccentricity0.9988[1]
Orbital period~13708 a[1]
Inclination66.3°[1]

Discovery and observations

The astronomer Jérôme Eugène Coggia discovered this comet on 17 April 1874 at the Marseille Observatory. During the remainder of April and in May the comet was closely observed by many astronomers, including Winnecke in Straßburg, Tempel in Arcetri, Rayet in Paris, Schulhof in Vienna, Rümker in Hamburg, Schmidt in Athens, Bruhns in Leipzig, Christie in Greenwich and Dreyer in Copenhagen. In mid-May telescopes revealed the development of a faint tail.

In early June the comet became visible to the naked eye[3][4] and by the end of June its brightness reached magnitude 4. By the beginning of July the tail had grown to 6° and by the 16th of July to 45°. The tail was straight and narrow, stretching across from 1° to 2° of the sky at the tail's end.[5]

According to David A. J. Seargent,[6]

Without doubt, C/1874 H1 (Coggia) was a beauty; a true great comet. At its brightest, it probably exceeded the first magnitude and displayed a series of envelopes within its coma that astronomers compared with Donati's Comet 16 years earlier. Suitably placed observers also noted maximum naked-eye tail lengths reaching 70 degrees as the comet passed near Earth in July.

From 16 July to 23 July, the comet accelerated and moved rapidly southward in the observer's sky, making the comet more difficult to observe in the northern hemisphere. Reports indicate that the tail length was about 60° to 70°; the tail was at least 63°.[7] On 23 July in Athens, Schmidt made the last observation of the comet from the northern hemisphere.

On July 27[8] the comet became visible in the southern hemisphere, with observations made in South Africa and by Robert L. J. Ellery[9] in Australia. According to a newspaper report from pre-dawn observations by H. C. Russell on July 29, "The nucleus was as bright as a first magnitude star, and the head about half the diameter of the moon."[10] John Tebbutt in Windsor, New South Wales made observations of the comet from 1 August to 7 October. On 19 October, John M. Thome at Córdoba, Argentina made the last observation of Comet Coggia.[5]

Undulations in the tail

On the evening of July 21 with a first quarter moon and a very clear sky, Trouvelot observed undulations in the comet's tail. Trouvelot wrote that he "... saw the comet's tail shortening and extending, lightening up and extinguishing like the rays of certain auroras. Extended undulations, rapid vibrations, ran along it in succession from the horizon to its extremity, giving it the appearance of a fine gauze wavering in a strong breeze. The pulsations and waves of light were of unequal duration; some being rapid, while others lasted a longer time. For over one hour, the comet's tail kindled and extinguished more than one hundred times; the extinction being sometimes so complete that it was impossible to see any trace of the comet; while sometimes it became so bright that, in spite of the light of the moon, it could be distinguished easily in all its contours, even to its very extremity, which was then a little to the south of γ Ursa Minoris. ..." [11]

Scientific analysis

From May to July 1874, Huggins, Secchi, Lockyer, Rayet and Wolf made spectrographic observations of the comet. At first only a continuum was found, but by mid-June the three typical comet spectral bands were found.[12] According to Huggins, Comet Coggia was "the first bright comet which has appeared since the spectroscope has become an instrument of scientific research."[13]

Orbit

Using 638 observations of Comet Coggia made over a period of 185 days, Josef von Hepperger in 1882 calculated an elliptical orbit inclined about 66° to the ecliptic.[14] On 9 July 1874 the comet reached perihelion at about .6758 AU from the Sun. On 23 July the comet made its closest approach to planet Earth at about .29 AU.[15]

Comet of 1874 in literature

Gerard Manley Hopkins wrote on 13 July 1874 a journal entry concerning Coggia's comet.[16]

The public scare regarding the comet was satirized by Mark Twain in his short story "A Curious Pleasure Excursion."[17]

gollark: Only the Over🌵 can help you decide that.
gollark: A 🌵ing question.
gollark: (which is RF)
gollark: How would we generate RFTools power?
gollark: Indeed. I only use it because I like doing browsery stuff but can't really get away from using JS-y stuff without 10MB of JS build output.

References

  1. Kronk, G. W. (2003). "J. von Heppeger's orbital calculation for C/1874 H1". Cometography: A Catalog of Comets. Volume 2: 1800–1899. Cambridge University Press. p. 411. ISBN 0-521-58505-8.
  2. Donald K. Yeomans. "NASA JPL Solar System Dynamics: Great Comets in History".
  3. "Coggia's Comet". Haydn's Dictionary of Dates and Universal Information (17th ed.). NY: Harper and Brothers. 1884. p. 175. To the casual observer near London the comet became readily visible about July 4th.
  4. Bailey, Greg, ed. (2014). "The Voyage of the F. H. Moore" and Other 19th Century Whaling Accounts. p. 60. According to Samuel Grant Williams’s journal entry for July 10, 1874, “… About the 3d this month we began to see a beautiful comet in the southern sky. It has been visible every night since. We see it a little after sundown and about midnight it fades from sight. …” Williams’s whaling ship (under the command of Captain Soper) might have been near 24.22°N, 85.40°W.
  5. Kronk, G. W. (2003). "C/1874 H1 (Coggia)". Cometography: A Catalog of Comets. Volume 2: 1800–1899. Cambridge University Press. pp. 405–412. ISBN 0-521-58505-8.
  6. Seargent, David A. J. (2008). "C/1874 H1 (Coggia)". The greatest comets in history. p. 126.
  7. Moore, P.; Rees, R. (2011). "Table 14.8 Selected list of brilliant comets, 1500–1900". Patrick Moore’s Data Book of Astronomy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 270. ISBN 978-0-521-89935-2.
  8. Hayter, Henry Heylyn (1875). "alleged sightings near Melbourne". Victorian Year Book for 1874. p. 226. "July 26.—Coggia's comet first seen in Victoria from Wilson's Promontory, Point Lonsdale, and the suburbs of Melbourne."
  9. A. Guillemin, trans. & ed. by J. Glaisher (1877). "comet observed by R. L. J. Ellery". The world of comets. London. p. 353.
  10. "The Comet". The Evening News, Sydney, New South Wales. 31 July 1874. p. 2.
  11. Trouvelot, L. "Undulations observed in the tail of Coggia's comet, 1874". Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 13, May 1877 – May 1878: 185–186.
  12. Grego, Peter (2013). Blazing a Ghostly Trail: ISON and Great Comets of the Past and Future. Springer. pp. 118–119. ISBN 978-3-319-01774-7.
  13. "Comet Coggia". The Astronomical Register (140): 183–193. August 1874.
  14. "NASA JPL Small-Body Database Browser: C/1874 H1".
  15. Vitagliano, A. "SOLEX 11.0". Archived from the original on 2009-04-29.
  16. David H. Levy: Poet and Observer: Gerard Manley Hopkins and some mid-19th Century Comets. In: Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. Vol. 75, No. 3, 1981, pp. 139–150. (PDF; 974 kB).
  17. Mark Twain (2013). Delphi Complete Works of Mark Twain (Illustrated). Delphi Classics. p. 2604. ISBN 978-1-908909-12-1.
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