Kohoutek's highly eccentric orbit and possible lack of prior planetary or solar interactions suggest that the comet may have been a primordial body of either the Solar System or that it may have originated from another
planetary system. The comet may have also originated from the
Oort cloud. A 1976 analysis of photometry and water loss rates estimated that the
nucleus had a radius of around and an
albedo of around 0.67. A photometric analysis of Kohoutek, using
Mercury as a reference, established an upper limit of for the diameter of Kohoutek's nucleus. An attempt to detect a
radar echo from Kohoutek's nucleus using the
Haystack Radio Telescope received no radar returns, constraining the nucleus's size to under . The comet has a total
absolute magnitude (at 1 AU) of 5.8 and a nuclear absolute magnitude of 9.5. During Kohoutek's 1973–1974 apparition, its tail's width ranged from around near the coma to farther away. Detection of positive
carbon monoxide ions showed that the tail was at least in length. A more yellow and orange appearance of the dust tail of Kohoutek during its perihelionas observed by astronauts on Skylabwas likely the result of
light scattering by
basaltic dust particles with sizes of around 0.5 μm. The tail lacked color closer to the coma near perihelion, indicating a large distribution of particle sizes and resulting in a white appearance. Observations from the
Joint Observatory for Cometary Research in
Socorro, New Mexico, were able to trace the blue ion tail of Kohoutekfeaturing more prominently than the comet's dust tailto a distance of away from the nucleus. The ion density within the tail several million miles away from the nucleus was about 10 cm−3, while the maximal electron density within the tail was around 20,000 cm−3. At a distance of around from the Sun, the plasma outflow in Kohoutek's tail generated a weak
magnetic field with a strength comparable to the
interplanetary magnetic field. Analyses of Kohoutek have provided different assessments of the scale of the comet's release of dust and gas, with some suggesting that Kohoutek is relatively dust-rich (and consequently gas-poor), and others suggesting that the comet is relatively dust-poor (and consequently gas-rich). Between 16 and 29 January 1974, the nucleus was expelling roughly of gas and of dust per second on average. The predominance of dust was thought to have been demonstrated by the emergence of an
antitail when the Earth passed through the plane of Kohoutek's orbit; antitails are composed of relatively large solid particles that disperse around the nucleus. Particles in the antitail had radii larger than approximately 10 μm, while particle radii in the coma and tail were less than 1.0 μm. At a distance of from the Sun, the less reflective material in the coma had an
effective temperature of , while the material in the antitail featured effective temperatures of . Intense solar heating near the time of perihelion greatly reduced the size of particles in the antitail, leaving behind only particles with initial sizes of at least 100–150 μm and leading to a decrease in the antitail's brightness following perihelion.
Silicates were also detected in the tail and antitail via
infrared astronomy. On 2 December 1973, Kohoutek was expelling about 900 billion dust molecules per second. However, Kohoutek became less dusty following perihelion, with dust production lowering to around 30 billion dust molecules per second on 31 January 1974. This transition was also underscored by an increase in the gas-to-dust ratio of Kohoutek by at least a factor of 2 after perihelion. The change may have been enabled by the evaporation of ice-covered surfaces as Kohoutek drew closer to the Sun. The ejection of
meteoroids during Kohoutek's approach and passage of the Sun added about of mass to the
zodiacal cloud. Smaller
micrometeoroids were detected by the
HEOS 2 satellite when it crossed the orbital plane of the outgoing comet around 9 June 1974, with the micrometeoroids being detected over the course of around 60 days surrounding the plane traversal; these micrometeoroids had masses ranging between 10−13 and 10−11 g. Later
photometric analyses indicated that Kohoutek was a gassy comet with a high gas-to-dust ratio, emblematic of comets entering the inner Solar System for the first time, suggesting a nucleus rich in
volatiles and relatively depleted in
refractory substances. Analyses of Kohoutek's coma and tail in the near-ultraviolet found the roughly equal presence of
hydrogen atoms and
hydroxide, suggesting that these chemical species
were once constituents of water. At a distance of from the Sun, Kohoutek was losing roughly 1.0 million tons (0.9 million tonnes) of water per day. The mass of water lost between 60 days before perihelion and 60 days after perihelion, when Kohoutek would have been ejecting the most water, was approximately . The mass loss due to the ejection of water after perihelion was roughly half as much as before perihelion. The surface of Kohoutek's nucleus was likely covered in a mix of particles and water ice stored in
clathrates. Much of this water was evaporated away as Kohoutek approached perihelion due to increased
insolation, leaving behind only subsurface ices and smaller pockets of water on the nuclear surface. The uneven outgassing behavior of both water and other volatiles indicates that Kohoutek's nucleus likely has a heterogeneous composition and structure on scales of around . Jets of vaporizing volatiles likely emanated from exposed areas where less volatile ices previously vaporized. Later analysis of spectrograms of Kohoutek provided strong evidence of the presence of the water
cation (), particularly in the comet's tail. This chemical species was most likely the result of the
photoionization of neutral water () very near the nucleus.
Atomic oxygen and
atomic carbon were also detected as the likely products of dissociating carbon monoxide or
carbon dioxide from the nucleus. The nucleus also outgassed
hydrogen at rates of up to approximately atoms per second at speeds of around . Due to the low mass of hydrogen and the weak gravitational pull of Kohoutek, the cloud of hydrogen surrounding the comet was of great extent, extending over across; the hydrogen cloud was thus larger than the disk of the Sun. Within the cloud, the ratio of
deuterium to atomic hydrogen was at most 1.0%. The atomic hydrogen was later understood to be the product of the photodissociation of water ice present in Kohoutek's nucleus. The nucleus may also have been once covered by a roughly meter-thick layer of highly volatile substances that quickly outgassed when Kohoutek first approached the inner Solar System.
Cyanide was first observed within Kohoutek's
coma on 15 October 1973, while the comet was at a heliocentric distance of . The spectrographic signature of
methyl cyanide at a wavelength of 2.7 mm was also detected in the nucleus of Kohoutek. Radio and
microwave observations of the comet identified
hydrogen cyanide,
methylidyne radicals, and
ethyl alcohol in addition to hydroxide and water. Other chemical species identified in the inner coma of Kohoutek included the
amino radical,
diatomic carbon, and
sodium iodide. Emission signatures of
tricarbon and
nitrogen gas were also detected. Unlike in previously observed comets, the
cyano radicals and diatomic carbon in Kohoutek's coma were not distributed spherically but instead elongated significantly away from the sun to distances of up to . == Observational history ==