Circular No. 2927 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION Postal Address: Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. Cable Address: SATELLITES, NEWYORK Western Union: RAPID SATELLITE CAMBMASS COMET WEST (1975n) Further observations have been reported of a secondary nucleus, and since Mar. 11 observers have described as many as four discrete condensations. Although it is difficult to correlate all the data given on IAUC 2924, J. Bortle, Brooks Observatory, who denotes by A and B the primary and secondary nuclei he observed on Mar. 8, was able to identify these same nuclei on Mar. 12, at which time he also noted nucleus C up the gas tail from A and nucleus D farthest to the east. The trapezoidal configuration on Mar. 12 was independently reported by S. O'Meara, Harvard College Observatory; by P. MacKinnon, D. Somers, D. Welch, R. Dick and F. Lossing, North Mountain Observatory, near Ottawa; and photographically by S. Murrell and C. Knuckles, New Mexico State University (61-cm f/40 reflector, plates measured by E. J. Reese). Although J. S. Neff, D. A. Ketelsen and V. V. Smith, University of Iowa, had described three of the nuclei (evidently A, B and D) as of equal brightness and essentially collinear on Mar. 11, G. H. Herbig, D. Duncan and D. Soderblom, observing with the 305-cm reflector at the Lick Observatory on Mar. 13 and 14, indicated that the basic configuration of Mar. 12 had been maintained. Observations of separation, position angle and magnitude difference (all with respect to A) follow: Nucleus B. Mar. 6.46 UT, (10"), 5o, 0 (F. Pilcher, Jacksonville, Illinois); 8.53, 3".5, (13o), 0 (Murrell et al.); 10.46, -, ~ 0o - (P. Maley, Houston, Texas); 10.86, (10") 135o [315o?], 0.5 (K. Ikeya, Japan); 11.5, (30"), 345o-350o, 0 (Neff et al.); 12.4, 4"-5", 345o, 1.3 (Bortle); 12.50, 8".2, 337o, > 0 (Murrell et al.); 13.5, 12", 330o, 2 (Herbig et al.); 14.4, 8", 330o, 2 (Bortle); 14.5, 12", 330o, 2 (Herbig et al.). Nucleus C. Mar. 11.5 UT, (5"), 280o, 2 (Neff et al.); 12.4, 2", 295o, 1 (Bortle); 12.50, 2".6, 294o, 0 (Murrell et al.); 13.5, 4"-5", 300o, 0 (Herbig et al.); 14.4, not observed, not observed, > 3 (Bortle); 14.5, 4"-5", 300o, 3 (Herbig et al.). Nucleus D. Mar. 11.5 UT, (15"), 345o-350o, 0 (Neff et al.); 12.4, 2", 15o, ~ 2 (Bortle); 12.50, 4", 0o, > 0 (Murrell et al.); 13.5, 5", 340o, 2 (Herbig et al.); 14.4, 3", 345o, 2.5-3.0 (Bortle); 14.5, 5", 340o, 2 (Herbig et al.). Herbig et al. remark that the nuclear condensations show continuous spectra (over 4500-8500 A). The coma spectrum also shows the usual emissions, including possibly H-alpha on the shortward fringe of solar-absorption H-alpha. The tail spectrum includes H2O+. 1976 March 15 (2927) Brian G. Marsden
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