closest approach of a comet to Earth | |
The comet was discovered by Charles Messier on 14th June 1770, but it was subsequently named after A. J. Lexell who studied the orbit of the comet and published his results in 1772 and 1779. He found that the comet had been projected into its Earth- approaching orbit by a close encounter with Jupiter 1767. Another even closer approach to Jupiter in 1779 once again perturbed the comet's orbit drastically, and it has been unobservable from Earth since then. |