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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2015
It is shown that sudden outbursts of comets, or even complete splitting of their nuclei into several parts, are rather frequent phenomena that need to be accounted for in the evolution of cometary orbits. The distribution of the points in which such events occur indicates that the tidal action of the Sun and Jupiter, and also solar radiation, are much more probable causes of these effects than are collisions with the asteroids. Splitting is found to be relatively more frequent for comets moving in hyperbolic orbits. The observed velocities of separation indicate that the disruption of the nucleus provides an effective mechanism for the ejection of the fragments from long-period into hyperbolic orbits, augmenting the loss by planetary perturbations. The outbursts can be responsible for smaller changes in the orbits, which after repetition might produce a quasi-secular variation.