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Re: Flashers
Humm; interesting.
bad flats; anything weird can be explained with bad flats
obscuring of the field of view; hence, changing reference stars &/or sky levels
forward scattering of light by a satellite; multiple events seem unlikely;
ah, unless it geo-synchronous.
I'd insure the steadiness of the reference stars in the same observation;
ya' want to make sure they're all stable and no drift
just asking the obvious questions; this is a good one, Tom....
george wm turner
uits/rats @ indiana university
812 855 5156
On Sun, 18 May 2003, Tom Droege wrote:
> All my recent data measures a star only once a night. So why not #3? With
> three dual telescopes running, I get everything that transits the meridian
> once a night in V and I.
>
> These are simultaneous brightenings in V and I. Not necessarily the same
> change in V and I.
>
> These are .2 to 1 mag increases in a star measured many times
> before. (Otherwise the WS would not pick it up.) Sometimes I see more than
> one in the data I have for a star. In some cases it might be shifted by
> 0.001 degree. In others it matches the other measurements to 0.0002 degree
> or better.
>
> I have sort of assumed that these are caused by airplane trails or some
> such. Cosmic rays cannot do it because of the simultaneous V and I
> requirement.
>
> Tom Droege
>
>
> At 11:35 PM 5/18/03 +0930, Fraser Farrell wrote:
> >Tom Droege wrote:
> > > Are there many stars that flash? I keep finding stars with one bright
> > > point.
> >
> >
> >TASS Press Release : the Mark IV discovers gravitational lens events.... :-)
> >
> >
> >Three of the four astronomical possibilities that come to mind can all be
> >dismissed:
> >
> > - Pulsars. Not bright enough (optically), and they would flash many many
> >times during a single Mark IV exposure.
> >
> > - Gamma ray burst's optical counterpart. This might explain those
> > occasional
> >"seen once and never again" stars.
> >
> > - Dwarf novae outbursts typically go on for hours, sometimes days. Lots of
> >these potentially detectable by TASS. But if you're taking many images per
> >night of a dwarf nova, you would see it "bright" on several consecutive
> >images.
> >
> >The fourth possibility is red dwarfs that are Flare Stars. These are
> >detectable as occasional outbursts of light & radio waves that last 10-30
> >minutes. Proxima Centauri, for example, can brighten from its usual mag 11 up
> >to mag 9 during a flare. Quite a sight if you're lucky enough to see one!
> >
> >
> >cheers,
> >
> >
> >--
> >
> >Fraser Farrell
> >
> >----------------------------------
> >http://astronomy.trilobytes.com.au
> >----------------------------------
>
>
>