Comet Ikeya–Seki

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Comet Ikeya-Seki (C/1965 S1) was a comet discovered independently by Kaoru Ikeya and Tsutomu Seki. First observed as a faint telescopic object on September 18, 1965, the first calculations of its orbit suggested that on October 21, it would pass just 450,000km above the sun's surface, and would probably become extremely bright.

Comets can defy all predictions, but Ikeya-Seki performed as expected. As it approached perihelion observers reported that it was clearly visible in the daytime sky next to the sun. In Japan, where it reached perihelion at local noon, it was seen shining at magnitude -17, some 60 times brigher than the full moon. It proved to be one of the brightest comets seen in the last thousand years, and is sometimes known as the Great Comet of 1965

The comet was seen to break into three pieces just before its perihelion passage. The three pieces continued in almost identical orbits, and the comet re-appeared in the morning sky in late October, showing a very bright tail. By early 1966, it had faded from view as it receded into the outer solar system.

Ikeya-Seki was a member of the Kreutz Sungrazers, which are all fragments of a large comet which broke up in 1106. The fragments of Ikeya-Seki will return to the inner solar system in approximately 880 years.