nova u M27?
Napsal: 22. 08. 2005, 07:38
Před pár hodinami přišel email z celosvětové konference o proměnných hvězdách VSNET, že jistý pan Jörg Hanisch na svém snímu M27 z noci 17/18 srpen 2005 objevil novu nebo asteroid. Nefotil jste někdo náhodou tuhle planetární mlhovinu během posledních několika dní?
Identifikační snímek je na
http://sabbe.fragzone.se/KPO/05081827.htm
Zde je text VSNET-ALERT [8627]:
Hello
Jörg Hanisch made a test image of M27 (16 x 20 sec) with his
C11 at 2699 mm FL and a unfiltered SXV-H9 camera at 3x3
binning in the night of 2005-08-17/18. When he blinked his
image with some images on the net, he found a new object at
the location:
RAJ2000: 19:59:51.29
DEJ2000: +22:42:32.3
CCD clear: 15.8 (+-0.4mag)
There is a faint USNO-B1.0 star near that locaion:
RAJ2000: 19:59:51.04
DEJ2000: +22:42:35.4
R2 mag : 17.31
The closest star Arne Henden has in his photometry files is:
RAJ2000: 19:59:51.15
DEJ2000: +22:42:30.6
V mag : 19.378
(B-V) : 1.246
But there is no bright, very red star present in the DSS2 infrared
or 2MASS J, H and Ks images at that location that could be
the reason for the bright CCD clear measurement. So its at
least an object thats a couple of mags brighter than usual.
Thorsten Lange used the Minor-Planet Checker at the IAU website
and didn't find any asteroids within 15' at 2005-08-18 00:00 UT.
Its not Goldilocks' Variable (19h59m29.8s, +22°45'13''), that is
located at the opposite side of M27:
http://www.obspm.fr/messier/xtra/leos/gl.html
Hans-Göran Lindberg also reported his new object today:
http://sabbe.fragzone.se/KPO/05081827.htm
(image made 2005-08-18 21:45 – 21:57 UT)
I've found an other image made by Dominik Wos (2005-08-18/19)
that also shows something brighter than usual at that position:
http://www.astrofotografia.zone.pl/eng/ ... 82005.html
Clear skies
Wolfgang Renz
--
Wolfgang Renz, Karlsruhe, Germany
Rz.BAV = WRe.vsnet = RWG.AAVSO
PS: If you encounter strange chars in the mail, try to switch to UTF-8
Identifikační snímek je na
http://sabbe.fragzone.se/KPO/05081827.htm
Zde je text VSNET-ALERT [8627]:
Hello
Jörg Hanisch made a test image of M27 (16 x 20 sec) with his
C11 at 2699 mm FL and a unfiltered SXV-H9 camera at 3x3
binning in the night of 2005-08-17/18. When he blinked his
image with some images on the net, he found a new object at
the location:
RAJ2000: 19:59:51.29
DEJ2000: +22:42:32.3
CCD clear: 15.8 (+-0.4mag)
There is a faint USNO-B1.0 star near that locaion:
RAJ2000: 19:59:51.04
DEJ2000: +22:42:35.4
R2 mag : 17.31
The closest star Arne Henden has in his photometry files is:
RAJ2000: 19:59:51.15
DEJ2000: +22:42:30.6
V mag : 19.378
(B-V) : 1.246
But there is no bright, very red star present in the DSS2 infrared
or 2MASS J, H and Ks images at that location that could be
the reason for the bright CCD clear measurement. So its at
least an object thats a couple of mags brighter than usual.
Thorsten Lange used the Minor-Planet Checker at the IAU website
and didn't find any asteroids within 15' at 2005-08-18 00:00 UT.
Its not Goldilocks' Variable (19h59m29.8s, +22°45'13''), that is
located at the opposite side of M27:
http://www.obspm.fr/messier/xtra/leos/gl.html
Hans-Göran Lindberg also reported his new object today:
http://sabbe.fragzone.se/KPO/05081827.htm
(image made 2005-08-18 21:45 – 21:57 UT)
I've found an other image made by Dominik Wos (2005-08-18/19)
that also shows something brighter than usual at that position:
http://www.astrofotografia.zone.pl/eng/ ... 82005.html
Clear skies
Wolfgang Renz
--
Wolfgang Renz, Karlsruhe, Germany
Rz.BAV = WRe.vsnet = RWG.AAVSO
PS: If you encounter strange chars in the mail, try to switch to UTF-8