2092-Feb-13 (MPC)[2] 2092-Feb-17 (JPL)[3] 2092 Mar. 16[4]
35P/Herschel–Rigollet is a periodiccomet with an orbital period of 155 years and an orbital inclination of 64 degrees. It fits the classical definition of a Halley-type comet with (20 years < period < 200 years).[1] It was discovered by Caroline Herschel (Slough, United Kingdom) on 21 December 1788. Given that the comet has a 155-year orbit[1] involving asymmetric outgassing, and astrometric observations in 1939 were not as precise as modern observations, predictions for the next perihelion passage in 2092 vary by about a month.
1789 apparition
Caroline Herschel first observed the comet on 21 December 1788 and it was observed later that night by her brother William Herschel who described it as looking like a bright nebula and about 5–6 minutes in diameter, and much larger than the planetary nebulaM57.
Similar possible orbits for the comet were calculated in 1789 by Pierre Méchain and in 1922 by Margaretta Palmer. Palmer considered that the orbit which best fitted the observations was an elliptical one with a period of 1,066 years.
The final calculation of the orbit, by Brian G. Marsden in 1974, used 75 positions from both apparitions of the comet in 1788 and 1939–40 in addition to perturbations by planets, and linked the two sightings, with a perihelion date of 9 August 1939 and a period of 155 years.