Printable finder charts for 22P/Kopff

by Dominic Ford
Use this form to download long-period wide-area finder-charts for planets, asteroids and comets. Each chart spans an entire apparition. For fainter objects, you will need a shorter duration finder-chart to show the object's exact position among the background stars on any given day.

Object type

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22P/Kopff

Color schemes
Date span Estimated date
when brightest
Date of
perigee
Date of
perihelion
Dark on light Light on dark Pastel
Apr 1996 – Oct 199613 Jul2 Jun19 AugPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVG
Apr 2009 – Oct 20096 Jul29 Jul3 JunPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVG
Dec 2021 – Jun 202218 Mar18 MarPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVG
Jan 2022 – Jul 20222 Apr14 SepPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVG
Apr 2028 – Oct 20285 Jul7 Jul2 JulPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVGPNGPDF-RGBPDF-CMYKSVG

Credits

The charts above were generated using StarCharter, a command-line tool for producing vector-graphics charts of the night sky, written by the author and freely available for download.

The paths of the planets are taken from the DE430 planetary ephemeris computed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). Planetary positions were extracted from the DE430 files using EphemerisCompute, which was also written by the author, and is also freely available for download.

The positions of asteroids are calculated from orbital elements published by Ted Bowell of the Lowell Observatory. Comet positions are computed from orbital elements published by the Minor Planet Center (MPC).

Star positions and magnitudes were taken from the Hipparcos, Tycho, Tycho-2 and Gaia EDR3 catalogs.

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South El Monte

Latitude:
Longitude:
Timezone:

34.05°N
118.05°W
PST

Color scheme