Tony Smith's Home Page

 
 

SUNGRAZERS:

 
The Kreutz group of sungrazing comets may be fragments 
of a Sungrazer Parent Comet with diameter 120 km  
that Brian Marsden has calculated to have 
appeared between 20,000 and 10,000 years ago.  
 
The Sungrazer Parent would have had a period of about 1,000 years, 
and fragmentation would have occurred between 10 and 20 periods ago.
Here, I use a rough figure of 10,000 BC for the fragmentation time. 
 
As the Sungrazers come very close to the Sun 
(some of them even hitting it, and so being Sunstrikers), 
they are very bright (Sungrazer Parent absolute magnitude -5.0) 
and very fast (on the order of 600 km/sec) at perihelion. 
 
Brian Marsden calculates that when the Sungrazer Parent 
fragmented, it split into two major groups, denoted I and II. 
 
Kreutz Sungrazer Group 1 held together until 371 BC, 
when it split into at least 3 pieces, 
one of which was the Great March Comet of 1843. 
 
Kreutz Sungrazer Group II held together until 1106 AD, 
when it split into at least 3 pieces, 
including the Great September Comet of 1882 
and Comet Ikeya-Seki of 1965. 
 
In the following table, 
? denotes uncertainty as to which Kreutz group a comet belongs  
and 
?? denotes uncertainty as to whether a comet is a Kreutz sungrazer.  
 
       Perihelion         Comet              Kreutz    Perihelion
          Date                               Group     Distance (km)  
 
          10,000 BC    Sungrazer Parent      
 
             371 BC    Aristotle               I?     
      4 Feb 1106                              II?     
      1 Mar 1668                               ??      1,500,000    
      2 Dec 1689       Richaud                 ??      1,500,000    
     23 Oct 1695       Jacob                   ??      1,500,000    
     15 Feb 1702I      Jacob                   ??      1,500,000    
     27 Feb 1843I      Great March Comet       I         827,000    
     28 Jan 1880I      Great Southern Comet    I         822,000    
     17 Sep 1882II     Great September Comet  II       1,160,000    
     11 Jan 1887I      Great Southern Comet     ?        723,000    
     27 Dec 1945VII    Du Tolt                II?      1,124,000    
     23 Aug 1963V      Pereyra                 I         758,000    
     21 Oct 1965VIII   Ikeya-Seki             II       1,165,000    
     14 May 1970VI     White-Ortiz-Bolelli    II       1,328,000    
     30 Aug 1979XI     Solwind 1              II?        720,000   
 
A sungrazer that hits the Sun is called a Sunstriker. 

Douglas Biesecker has an excellent web-page about Sungrazers.  
Thanks to him for correcting an error I had on 
the Perihelion Distance of 1979XI.  The figure above is now 
roughly correct, I think.  
It means that 1979XI was not a Sunstriker, 
but was a Sungrazer that came very close to the photosphere.  
As he says, as of 15 May 1997, 
"... 23 sun-grazers [have been] discovered since ... 1979XI ...". 
His page is not only about Sungrazers, 
but covers much more about astrophysics, especially Solar astrophyics.
 

  Much of the information on this page comes from Fred Schaaf's 1997 book, Comet of the Century.  
 

Tony Smith's Home Page

......