How Meteor Showers Can Guide the Search for Long Period Comets
Samantha Hemmelgarn, Nicholas Moskovitz, Stuart Pilorz, and Peter, Jenniskens

TL;DR
This study explores how meteor showers can help locate long-period comets by analyzing their predicted positions and applying this method to a specific case, improving comet discovery strategies before they are observed.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel approach using meteor shower data to predict the current locations of parent long-period comets, aiding their discovery before perihelion.
Findings
Synthetic comet models accurately predict parent comet positions.
The method successfully pre-identified Comet Nishimura 8 months before discovery.
On average, predicted parent comet locations were within 1.5 degrees of actual positions.
Abstract
With orbital periods longer than 200 years, most long-period comets (LPCs) remain undiscovered until they are in-bound towards perihelion. The comets that pass close to Earth's orbit are Potentially Hazardous Objects (PHOs). Those with orbital periods up to ~4000 years tend to have passed close to Earth's orbit in a previous orbit and produced a meteoroid stream dense enough to be detected at Earth as a meteor shower. In anticipation of Rubin Observatory's Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), we investigate how these meteor showers can guide dedicated searches for their parent comets. Assuming search parameters informed by LSST, we calculated where the 17 known parent bodies of long-period comet meteor showers would have been discovered based on a cloud of synthetic comets generated from the shower properties as measured at Earth. We find that the synthetic comets predict the on-sky…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Space Satellite Systems and Control
