[Date Prev][Date Next][Date Index]

(cba:news) Outburst of VW Hyi (Joe Patterson) [2011-11-26T10:57:39Z]


Dear CBAers,

Despite the rash of fascinating targets in this month's night skies - and in particular the first-in-history eruption of BW Scl - I'm inclined to give VW Hyi an emphatic welcome to the CBA menu. Although it has been studied a lot, it has never been thoroughly studied with today's "all-telescopes-all-the-time" techniques... and as one of the nearest/brightest dwarf novae, it promises to yield a lot of information from such close scrutiny. In particular: (1) the fascinating but still little-known fine structure of superhumps (nw-mW, where n and m are unequal integers); (2) the details of how power gets shuffled between orbit and superhump frequencies;
(3) the possible transient appearance of negative superhumps; and
(4) the precise shape of the long-term O-C.

With very nearly global coverage of the outburst, I bet VW Hyi would have something useful to contribute to each of these questions. And that doesn't even count the harvest of unanticipated results... which is the usual outcome of *any* scientific experiment!

I imagine that VW Hyi will be an all-night target for you australites... which might threaten BW Scl somewhat. I hope there's enough telescopes and overlap of coverage to permit both targets!

joe


Why?  Because it's one of the very brightest of dwarf novae

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [vsnet-alert 13894] Outburst of VW Hyi
Date: Sat, 26 Nov 2011 11:19:53 +0100
From: Josch Hambsch <hambsch@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <vsnet-alert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>



Dear all,

I have been observing VW Hyi for the past two nights on request and observed a rise in magnitude from about 13.5 on Nov. 24/25 to 10.1 on Nov. 25/26. I have taken time series during both nights (the last night is still busy to be analysed) and those will be submitted to VSNET and AAVSO. Please advice whether I should continue time series or only snapshots during the coming nights.

Regards,

Josch

http://www.astronomie.be/hambsch