| Description |
Comet 9P/Tempel 1 was discovered
in 1867 by Ernest Wilhelm Leberecht Tempel. The comet is called Tempel
1 because it was the first comet discovered by Tempel. It was also the
ninth comet ever to be identified as periodic, which gives it the 9P
designation. |
| Age |
About the same age as the Sun: 4.5
billion years |
| Location |
Its elliptical orbit is located
between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. |
| Avg. distance from the Sun |
Roughly between 227.9 million kilometers
(141.6 million miles) and 778.3 million kilometers (483.6 million miles)
from the Sun. Gravitational interactions with the planet Jupiter have
and will continue to alter the comet’s path. However, its orbit
is expected to remain between Mars and Jupiter. |
| Diameter |
The nucleus is more potato-shaped
than spherical. Tempel 1’s size is estimated to be 14 kilometers
by 4 kilometers by 4 kilometers (8.7 miles by 2.5 miles by 2.5 miles).
This means its volume is roughly the same as that of a sphere, 6.8 kilometers
(4.2 miles) across. |
| Mass |
Between 0.1 and 2.5 x 1014 kilograms |
| Orbital period around the Sun |
5.5 Earth years |
| Distinguishing fact |
On July 4, 2005, a man-made probe
was intentionally crashed into the comet, in an attempt to release the
primordial material trapped below Tempel 1’s crust. |