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(cba:news) stars for june (Joe Patterson) [2009-06-16T14:02:23Z]


Dear CBAers,

Time for some (northern) spring cleaning. The raft of March-April AM CVn stars have swung too far over to the west, and the dwarf novae are a little quiet these days. Here's a few tantalizing new stars which are well placed for observation during June nights.

V4743 Sgr. Berto has just opened the season on this guy (now about 16.5 I think), the remnant of N Sgr 2002. The spate of periods that the star showed a couple of years ago still lingers - in fact seems to have become a little more intricate - and this new season gives us an opportunity to study 'em in great detail. A great, great target for all southern observers... and maybe a few intrepid northerners as well.

V442 Oph. After many years at magnitude 14, this star apparently has declined to V=17, and it's vital that we obtain time-series photometry in this low state. The origin of low states in these stars (the SW Sex stars) is still not known, and Nature doesn't offer many opportunities to find out, since the low states are very rare. Get thee to a telescope! At a dec of -17 degrees and transiting near local midnight, it's decently placed for most observers, and excellently placed for southerners.

For flat-out northern objects, I recommend one very bright star (RX1643+34, mag 12.7) which still has not quite (almost, though) yielded to our superhump search, and which has also shown some evidence of a rapid period - or maybe just an oddly stable QPO. Still some annoying mysteries there. It's also DQ Her season again - ESPECIALLY if you can take data with around a 15 second time resolution (which will easily resolve its 71 second signal).


joe