From jop at astro.columbia.edu Sun Jan 27 02:52:20 2019 From: jop at astro.columbia.edu (Joe Patterson) Date: Sun, 27 Jan 2019 02:52:20 -0500 Subject: (cba:news) stars for Jan-Feb Message-ID: <6802675a-ddac-1555-b077-1fbb4badf4be@astro.columbia.edu> Hi CBAers, As you've probably noticed, my favorites have swung much more in the direction of old (and not so old) novae - and they dominate this list too. A list of "well-studied" dwarf novae would probably now run 100-200, so that's not so much where we're learning a lot of new things (IMHO). So the novae dominate this list. I've been laboring mightily over V598 Pup - and am finished! Except maybe for a brief flurry near the end of the observing season. I've found a stable 3.5 hour period - surely the orbit - and some signals around 1 hour which may or may not be stable. Time to quit. Strangely, the next southern mystery nova to tackle is V597 Pup. It's around 17.7 and eclipsing, so only accessible to the bigger scopes and braver observers Also with a few-minute signal which appears to be stable. A *great* star, but alas, beyond reach for most of us. I realize it's strange, but the list of Puppis novae goes on. We haven't yet started the season on HZ Pup, and that's probably a very juicy CBA target - with fast and slow periodic signals which are of decent amplitude and still not properly published. For australites out there, this would be a good prime target - *certain* to be rewarding. Then there's CP Pup, an old favorite. Big ongoing campaign. Worth continuing if you've been covering it a lot. If you haven't, switch to HZ Pup or one of the other seasonal stars. I also strongly recommend V902 Mon, a deep-eclipsing star with a probable has a fast periodic signal. Some of our data has already been published anonymously as "AAVSO data", but we have plenty more, and it's time to finish the study up. A nice both-hemisphere star, ideal for period-finding in our global network. Most people like the stars which are *solidly* in their hemisphere (since then you can get long runs). The two good northern ones now are AT Cnc and AM CVn - both asking for long continuous runs, night after night. The first is a new, unpublished IP... and the second of course is one of the mega-stars of the sky. I'll get access to my 2018-9 notebook later today, and might have some other comments. joe p ____________________________________________________________ Center for Backyard Astrophysics (CBA) mailing lists https://cbastro.org/communications/mailing-lists/