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Great Comet of 371 BC

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X/-371
(Aristotle's Comet)
Discovery
Discovery date372–371 BC
Orbital characteristics
Orbit typeKreutz sungrazers?
Orbital period~400–500 years
Last perihelion371 BC

The Great Comet of 372–371 BC (sometimes Aristotle's Comet) was a comet that is thought to possibly be the source of the Kreutz sungrazer family.[1][2]

The Great Comet was observed by Aristotle,[3] Ephorus,[4] and Callisthenes.[5] Ephorus reported that it split into two pieces,[4] a larger fragment that is thought to have possibly returned in 1106 AD, as X/1106 C1,[6] and another smaller fragment. While visible from Earth, it was said to have cast shadows at night comparable to a full moon.[3]

Observations

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The comet was reported to have had a long, bright tail that had a reddish colour, as well as a nucleus brighter than any star in the night sky.[5]

Aristotle wrote in Book 1 of Meteorologica[7]

The great comet, which appeared about the time of the earthquake in Achaea and the tidal wave, rose in the west... The great comet... appeared during winter in clear frosty weather in the west, in the archonship of Asteius: on the first night it was not visible as it set before the sun did, but it was visible on the second, being the least distance behind the sun that would allow it to be seen, and setting immediately. Its light stretched across a third of the sky in a great band, as it were, and so was called a path. It rose as high as Orion’s belt, and there disappeared.

Quoting a lost source, Diodorus Siculus wrote that[3]

[T]here was seen in the heavens during the course of many nights a great blazing torch which was named from its shape a flaming beam...this torch had such brilliancy...and its light such strength that it cast shadows on the earth similar to those cast by the moon.

Effect on prophecy

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Diodorus wrote that the comet was believed by some to have foretold the decline of the Spartans, and describes the debate over its nature.[8]

During their term of office, after the Lacedaemonians had held the supremacy in Greece for almost five hundred years, a divine portent foretold the loss of their empire... and a little later, to the surprise of all, the Spartans were defeated in a great battle and irretrievably lost their supremacy. Some of the students of nature ascribed the origin of the torch to natural causes, voicing the opinion that such apparitions occur of necessity at appointed times, and that in these matters the Chaldaeans in Babylon and the other astrologers succeeded in making accurate prophecies. These men, they say, are not surprised when such a phenomenon occurs, but rather if it does not, since each particular constellation has its own peculiar cycle and they complete these cycles through age-long movements in appointed courses.

Dispute over date

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The comet is sometimes referred to as occurring during 373-372 BC instead of 372-371 BC. Seneca wrote later that the sightings of the comet coincided with the destruction of Buris and Helice, suggesting a date of 373-372 BC.[9]

In that fire there were many worthy things which should be noted, but nothing more so the fact that when it flashed in the sky the sea immediately covered Buris and Helice.

Most sources refer to it as occurring in 372-371 BC. Göran Henriksson writes:[10]

The content in the text by Diodorus can be accurately dated in two independant [sic] ways to 372/371 BC. The first Olympiad was celebrated after the summer solstice in 776 BC, which gives 372 BC for the one hundred and second Olympiad, and the archonship of Alcisthenes can be dated to the same year from the inscriptions on the Marble Parium. The dating of the text by Aristotle is somewhat more complicated. He dates first the great comet to ”about the time of the earthquake in Achaea”, but later he says more specifically that it appeared ”in the archonship of Asteius”, who according to Diodorus was the archon in the year of the earthquake in Achaea, which from Marble Parium can be fixed to 373/372 BC. The dating by Aristotle of the comet to the archonship of Asteius seems to be approximate, but the dating of the earthquake in Archaea to be exact.

Source of other comets

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The Great Comet of 1843 was a Kreutz Sungrazer.

Heinrich Kreutz was a German astronomer,[11] who claimed that the orbits of several sungrazing comets were related and likely produced when a large Sun-grazing comet fragmented hundreds of years previously. That group, known as the Kreutz Sungrazers, has produced some of the brightest comets ever observed, including X/1106 C1 and Comet Ikeya–Seki. Aristotle's comet may have been the progenitor of the entire group.[12] If it was the source of all Kreutz sungrazers, it must have had a nucleus of at least 120 km in diameter.[5]

Astronomer Goran Henriksson has speculated that the comet was Comet Encke, although this is not widely accepted.[10]

Seneca's arguments against Euphorus

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Based on the ancient Greek belief that comets were the source of celestial objects, Seneca challenged the report of Euphorus.[13]

He asserts that the great comet which, by its rising, sank Helice and Buris, which was carefully watched by the eyes of the whole world since it drew issues of great moment in its train, split up into two stars; but nobody besides him has recorded it. Who, I wonder, could observe the moment at which the comet broke up and was resolved into two parts? And if there is any one who saw it split up into two, how is it that no one saw it first formed out of the two? And why did Ephorus not add the names of the two stars into which it was broken up, since they must have been some of the five planets?

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Marsden B.G. (1967), "The Sungrazing Comet Group", The Sungrazing Comet Group I, vol. 72, The Astronomical Journal, p. 1170, Bibcode:1967AJ.....72.1170M, doi:10.1086/110396
  2. ^ Marsden B.G. (1989), "The Sungrazing Comet Group II", The Astronomical Journal, 98: 2306, Bibcode:1989AJ.....98.2306M, doi:10.1086/115301
  3. ^ a b c David A.J. Seargent (2008), "The Great Comet of (ca.) 372 B.C., Aristotle's Comet", The Greatest Comets in History, Springer Science & Business Media, ISBN 9780387095134
  4. ^ a b Donald K. Yeomans (1998). "Great Comets in History". Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 2007-03-15.
  5. ^ a b c England, K. J. (2002). "Early Sungrazer Comets" (PDF). Journal of the British Astronomical Association. 112: 13. Bibcode:2002JBAA..112...13E.
  6. ^ Williams, John (1871). "Observations of Comets: From 611 B.C. to A.D.1640 : Extracted from the Chinese annals". Royal Astronomical Society. Science and Technology. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  7. ^ Aristotle, Meteorology, archived from the original on 2004-04-05
  8. ^ Siculus, Diodorus. "Bibliotheca historica, Book XV".
  9. ^ Seneca, Natural Questions, Book 7, (5.4)
  10. ^ a b Henriksson, Göran. "Aristotle, King David, King Zhou and Pharaoh Thutmosis III Have Seen Comet Encke".
  11. ^ Hockey, Thomas (2009). The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers. Springer Publishing. ISBN 978-0-387-31022-0. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  12. ^ European Space Agency, 'Sungrazer' comets
  13. ^ Seneca the Younger, Naturales Quaestiones 7.16; (translated by John Clarke, 1910)

Further reading

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