Comet 322P/SOHO 1: An asteroid with the smallest perihelion distance?
Matthew M. Knight, Alan Fitzsimmons, Michael S. P. Kelley, Colin, Snodgrass

TL;DR
This study presents the first ground and space-based observations of comet 322P/SOHO 1, revealing its asteroid-like properties, high density, and potential asteroidal origin, with activity possibly driven by non-volatile processes.
Contribution
It provides detailed physical characterization of 322P/SOHO 1, suggesting it is an asteroid with comet-like orbit and activity mechanisms different from traditional comets.
Findings
Appeared inactive in all images
Estimated diameter of 150-320 meters
Possible non-volatile activity mechanisms
Abstract
We observed comet 322P/SOHO 1 (P/1999 R1) from the ground and with the Spitzer Space Telescope when it was between 2.2 and 1.2 AU from the Sun. These are the first observations of any SOHO-discovered periodic comet by a non-solar observatory, and allow us to investigate its behavior under typical cometary circumstances. 322P appeared inactive in all images. Its lightcurve suggests a rotation period of 2.8+/-0.3 hr and has an amplitude greater than ~0.3 mag, implying a density of at least 1000 kg m, considerably higher than that of any known comet. It has average colors of g'-r' = 0.52+/-0.04 and r'-i' = 0.04+/-0.09. We converted these to Johnson colors and found that the V-R color is consistent with average cometary colors, but R-I is somewhat bluer; these colors are most similar to V- and Q-type asteroids. Modeling of the optical and IR photometry suggests it has a diameter of…
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