Conversion of Clear Channel Images to V Mag

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Fri, 10/27/2023 - 22:11

Does anyone know if there is such a thing as a conversion constant or figure 

for converting Clear Channel CCD images to V Mag?

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Clear Filter

Michael:

If you are using a Clear filter for photometry because a target is very faint or you don't have a V filter (get one!), you can report your magnitudes as CV.  You should measure your target magnitude by comparison to the V magnitudes of your comps per your normal process. Do not report the magnitude as V BUT CV. It is an acceptable/appropriate filter name in an AAVSO Report.

HTH, Ken

 

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
If you are indeed using a…

If you are indeed using a monochrome CCD without a filter, then CV is the choice. If the object's magnitude is changing, you will get a light curve when you plot it vs time.

Ray TRE

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
If you are not using a…

If you are not using a filter, shouldn't  it be reported as unfiltered?  The CV filter choice is for data taken through the green channel of a DSLR (or other color camera)-- I don't think unfiltered data would fit there.

WebObs gives you a choice of "unfiltered with V zero point" which would be for unfiltered data using v magnitudes for your reference stars (as I understand it).

Tom

 

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
DSLR Green Channel

Tom:

A magnitude from the green channel of the Bayer array in a DSLR/OSC camera should be reported as TG (tri-color green) not CV. The green channel filter is certainly not a 'clear' filter. This TG magnitude is calculated by comparison to the catalog V magnitude of your comparison stars.

Ken 

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
CV "filter" defiinition

In the AAVSO International Database, 'CV' means that an observation was made without a filter and reduced to a V zeropoint using Johnson V-magnitude comparison stars (not v magnitude comp stars). The C stands for 'clear' - that is, no filter - and the V stands for the V zeropoint.

Similarly, if an observation were made without a filter and reduced to a Cousins R zeropoint using Cousins R-magnitiude comparison stars, it would be tagged as 'CR'.

This is how these types of observations are generally referred to in current astronomical publications.

Good observing,

Elizabeth Waagen, AAVSO HQ