The discovery of this stream was made by
Zdenek Sekanina during the 1961-1965 phase of the Radio Meteor Project conducted
at Havana, Illinois. A total of 15 radio meteors were detected between January
29 and February 28. Sekanina found Earth to cross the stream's node on February
13.6, at which time the radiant was at RA=314.3 deg, DECL=-23.7 deg. The
stream's geocentric velocity was determined to be 26.8 km/s.
The Chi Capricornids were essentially
confirmed during 1969, when G. Gartrell and W. G. Elford, using the Adelaide,
Australia, radio meteor system, detected 3 meteors during February 10-17, which
possessed an average radiant of RA=316 deg, DECL=-21 deg.
Sekanina concluded that the stream possessed
a close association with the Apollo asteroid Adonis (D-criterion=0.185) and
suggested it might be the twin branch of the Sigma Capricornids of July
(D-criterion=0.187). Gartrell and Elford suggested a possible association with
the periodic comet Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova. Gartrell and Elford suggested that
Brian Marsden and Zdenek Sekanina's 1971 discovery of strong nongravitational
forces influencing this comet's motion should not rule out "the possibility of
related meteor streams with significantly different orbits...."
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