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(cba:news) UZ Boo, V1101 Aql, mainly (Joe Patterson) [2013-07-26T11:10:13Z]


Hi CBAers,

UZ Boo is in outburst again, about 10 years after the last. We've only seen two previous outbursts, both very sparsely observed. This is a dwarf nova with our favorite credentials: nearby (~150 pc), WZ Sge class, relatively long period. Beautiful! Despite the inconvenience of Bootes in late July, this is still an extremely desirable target. With decent weather and a Europe-eastern Americas-western Americas handoff, we stand a pretty good chance of deciphering the period structure.

What's happening in Aquila these days? Well, for us, anyway. First, we're finished with V1315 Aql. Nice eclipses, but a weak superhump this year, and we're done with it. The V1432 Aql campaign is going well, but only needs occasional coverage - once a week is just fine. The star I strongly recommend for intensive coverage is V1101 Aquilae, which is busy flashing a beautiful smile full of negative superhumps. Technically I suppose it's "the first Z Cam star to show superhumps" - though that's a somewhat weak statement, since Z Cam is really not a well-defined moniker, and they're hardly ever studied in long nightly time series. Anyway, there are a host of unanswered questions: how long will they last? how stable are they? are there also positive superhumps? is there also a superorbital ("nodal precession") frequency present? At 14.4, everyone can do this star, and I hope some AU-NZ observers will take a crack at it too, since we usually lack observations from Australasia. And be sure to specify comparison star; studies for the superorbital period (supposedly around 4 days) will require a close calibration between observing stations.

The two main southern stars I'm promoting now are GW Lib and BW Scl. Both recent erupters which have shown WD pulsations, as well as some mysterious long-period signals - origin still unknown. Decently placed in the sky, and bright enough for average, roughly clear nights (~16.5). I'll repeat a wish list, though: V4743 Sgr, V1494 Aql, IM Nor, V4633 Sgr, V3890 Sgr (in order of increasing faintness and/or difficulty). Faintness or crowded fields guard these stars' secrets quite well, but there are suspicions that those secrets are worth knowing!

The X-ray variable in Equuleus. Enrique, Josch, and Jim Jones are covering this guy pretty well, and it's variable on MANY timescales. But so far, no period. Disappointing. Yet the spectrum and extreme variability definitely suggest some kind of high-Mdot CV. At 12th magnitude, good target for small scopes. Let's keep going another 1-2 weeks at least. It might be a good idea to try for a very fast cycle time (10 s?) - so far we haven't investigated that regime.

joe