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    october-november stars

    From: Joe Patterson <jop_at_astro.columbia.edu>
    Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2007 10:06:05 -0400
       Dear CBAers,
    
       Well, the flow of data from the V455 And has been immense, and of
       a quality which should be sufficient to define the properties of the
       outburst quite well.  I've been kept busy tracking everything day by
       day; our data illustrate the various changes in eclipse shape and in 68
       s pulse phase (which stays pretty constant, although has to be
       studied mainly by using the 34 s first harmonic).  To a first approxi-
       mation, it seems that the pulse phase charges right on through the
       outburst, as if nothing is happening!  This is more or less what you
       expect if the signal represents the spin period of a rapidly rotating
       white dwarf. Soooo..... I guess it does!
    
       That's good enough for me. I think it's still very desirable to obtain
       long nightly coverage of V455 And - for another month or so.  But
       the frantic search for better time resolution - well, we can call that
       part off.  Cycle times of 30-40 s probably suffice to define the other
       fine detail of the light curve: the variable eclipse shape.  This is
       of very great interest; if you've been covering it, keep it up!
    
       BTW are there new V455 And time series (from the last 10-15 days) in
       the pipeline?  I suspect there's some European data on a slow boat....
       I'm hardly ever concerned about this, but I wanted to fast-track all
       this data, and it would help a lot to prepare FINAL nightly light
       curves...
    
       The other prime northern target is RX0022+61 = IGR0023+61 = "Cas".
       We got a boatload of coverage last year, but not quite enough to solve
       all the aliasing (and borderline signal) issues.  This is an excellent
       target for all-night photometry over the next six weeks.  BTW this is
       NOT the same star as V410 Cas, which lurks dangerously nearby.
    
       Later on in the northern nights, new and hardly-studied DQ Hers come
       into view.  I highly recommend RX0636+35 = "Aur" and RX0704+26 = "Gem".
       Plus V405 Aur, an old friend we haven't visited in years.  Peachy
       targets for those brisk, clear mornings of October and November.
    
       The Milky Way's in the far north now, so the pickings aren't quite
       as abundant in the south.  Here's the big three that I see.
    
       (1) BW Scl.  The southern V455 And.  Just as rich in periodic
       signals, no eruptions yet known. About 16.5, so perhaps will need
       a fully clear night.
    
       (2) RX0232-37 = For (but I believe not in Downes et al.).  Seemingly
       another WZ Sge star... but the light curve has new surprises (it's
       rising again), and the superhump endureth.  Might not erupt again in
       your life.
    
       (3) SDSS0407-06 = Eri.  A great, great negative superhumper, or at
       least it was 2 years ago.  I'd like to run a big campaign in December
       from both hemispheres.  But early-season data now would be mighty nice.
    
       Happy observing!  I hope to see a few of you next week in Cambridge
       (AAVSO meeting).
    
       joe
    
        
    
    Received on 24 Oct 2007