X-Nico

unusual facts about 10P/Tempel


Comet Tempel

10P/Tempel, Comet Tempel 2 (a.k.a. 10P/1873 N1, 1873 II, 1873b, 10P/1878 O1, 1878 III, 1878b, 1894 III, 1894c, 1899 IV, 1899c, 1904 III, 1904c, 1915 I, 1915c, 1920 II, 1920a, 1925 IV, 1925d, 1930 VII, 1930f, 1946 III, 1946b, 1951 VIII, 1951d, 1957 II, 1956e, 1962 VI, 1961b, 1967 X, 1967d, 1972 X, 1972c, 1978 V, 1977d, 1983 X, 1982d, 1988 XIV, 1987g, 1994 VII)


11P/Tempel–Swift–LINEAR

Ernst Wilhelm Leberecht Tempel (Marseille) originally discovered the comet on November 27, 1869, it was later observed by Lewis Swift (Warner Observatory) on October 11, 1880 and realised to be the same comet.

65 Cybele

Tempel had awarded the honour of naming the asteroid to Carl August von Steinheil in recognition of his achievements in telescope production.

AMX-10P

The first production vehicles were delivered in 1973 to the 7th Mechanised Brigade stationed at Reims.

Peroxisomal targeting signal

PEX5 interacts with a large number of other proteins, including Pex8p, 10p, 12p, 13p, 14p.

Wilhelm Tempel

Ernst Wilhelm Leberecht Tempel (December 4, 1821 – March 16, 1889), normally known as Wilhelm Tempel, was a German astronomer who worked in Marseille until the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, then later moved to Italy.


see also