![]() Comet C/2020 A2 (Iwamoto) photographed from the Zwicky Transient Facility on 19 February 2020. | |
Discovery [1] [2] | |
---|---|
Discovered by | Masayuki Iwamoto |
Discovery site | Tokushima, Japan |
Discovery date | 8 January 2020 |
Designations | |
CK20A020, [2] IF033 [3] | |
Orbital characteristics [4] | |
Epoch | 23 February 2020 (JD 2458902.5) |
Observation arc | 104 days |
Number of observations | 529 |
Aphelion | ~2,120 AU |
Perihelion | 0.978 AU |
Semi-major axis | ~1,060 AU |
Eccentricity | 0.99908 |
Orbital period | ~34,500 years |
Inclination | 120.75° |
286.38° | |
Argument of periapsis | 68.209° |
Mean anomaly | 0.0013° |
Last perihelion | 8 January 2020 |
TJupiter | –0.622 |
Earth MOID | 0.312 AU |
Jupiter MOID | 1.129 AU |
Physical characteristics | |
Comet total magnitude (M1) | 15.1 |
Comet nuclear magnitude (M2) | 17.2 |
9.6 [5] (2020 apparition) |
Comet Iwamoto, formally designated as C/2020 A2 is a faint non-periodic comet that was observed between January and April 2020. As of 2025 [update] , it is the fourth and most recent comet discovered by Japanese astronomer, Masayuki Iwamoto. [6] [a]
Masayuki Iwamoto reported a new 14th-magnitude object with cometary features on the night of 8 January 2020, which was moving gradually north within the constellation Ophiuchus. [3] [b] Nearly five days later, Gennadiy Borisov confirmed the existence of Iwamoto's new comet, reporting that it has a diffuse coma about 40 arcseconds in diameter. [2] Additional observations from the Xingming Observatory, Magdalena Ridge Observatory, and other sites between 10 and 14 January 2020 reveal that the comet does not have a tail at the time. [7]