Thanks Chris.Chris Peterson wrote:Yes, you have been somewhat under a misapprehension. In fact, most comets with hyperbolic orbits are actually periodic (although all long period comets which haven't been observed before are called non-periodic). So-called hyperbolic orbit comets typically have eccentricities only very slightly greater than one, and those eccentricities drop below one again once they are some distance from the Sun. The result is a comet with a period of hundreds of thousands or more years (there's no way to reliably determine the period of such comets), but definitely an orbit that will remain closed around the Sun. Only a very few comets have been observed on obvious ejection orbits.Anthony Barreiro wrote:I've had the impression that because Comet ISON's orbit is hyperbolic, this will be it's one and only pass through the inner solar system. Have I been laboring under a misapprehension?
C/2012 S1 is almost certainly periodic.
With an eccentricity so close to 1 and a small, volatile nucleus, can we really predict whether or not this particular bit of space fluff will ever return to inner solar system? If it does, hopefully there will still be human beings with astronomical records hundreds of thousands of years in the future, so they can correct our error and call this Comet Nevski-Novichonok.