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Announcement: New Applications
We are excited to announce the launch of our new applications! We're opening up early access to our new applications for searching, downloading, and submitting photometric observations. You can now access these applications through these links:
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I asked my Mentor that very question. His response was that there certainly is value in partial observations. I’ll have to search out his response and see what, if any specifics, he added to that generality.
In general, I’d suspect it would be useful to capture both ingress and egress points as well as as much baseline as possible on one side or the other of the ‘dip’. I might run later, or start earlier to make up for lost baseline on the other side. I’d try to avoid further compromises by not having a meridian flip within the observation. I’ll let you know if I find anything else in his email….assuming I can find it.
I asked my Mentor…
Hi Andrew
I asked my Mentor that very question. His response was that there certainly is value in partial observations. I’ll have to search out his response and see what, if any specifics, he added to that generality.
In general, I’d suspect it would be useful to capture both ingress and egress points as well as as much baseline as possible on one side or the other of the ‘dip’. I might run later, or start earlier to make up for lost baseline on the other side. I’d try to avoid further compromises by not having a meridian flip within the observation. I’ll let you know if I find anything else in his email….assuming I can find it.
cheers
Gary
ps: someone smarter than I will chime in I hope.
Yes, partial eclipses are useful, especially if:
1. They cover a good amount of pre-ingress or post-egress baseline
AND
2. They cover some amount of the transit past the predicted midpoint.
Dennis
Thanks all for the information. Regards Andrew