Request to observe source of X-Ray flare (southern hemisphere)

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Fri, 03/08/2024 - 08:22

The KiloNova Catcher (KNC) project has requested a Target Of Opportunity observation for the southern hemispehere (Gravitational Wave detectors are currently offline so this is not related to a "kilonova" trigger from LIGO/VIRGO (the main "business" of KNC), but could still be very interesting)

An interesting X-ray flare was observed by the newly launched Einstein Probe https://www.mpe.mpg.de/7867826/EinsteinProbe and floowed up by observations of by Neil Gehrels/SWIFT which conformed a source. Deep (say, 18 mag and fainter) observations in the optical are requested.

https://www.astronomerstelegram.org/?read=16509

https://www.astronomerstelegram.org/?read=16514

If you are already subscribed to the Kilo Nova Catcher project, you will soon be able to upload any images you take of this field to the KNC web backend. If you are not yet  registered to the project ... do that :-)   Of course you can aslo report findings here.

The coordinates are :

EP240305a, 08:11:41.04 -54:39:07.20
(α,δ= 122.921, -54.652)

CS

HB

 

 

Affiliation
Vereniging Voor Sterrenkunde, Werkgroep Veranderlijke Sterren (Belgium) (VVS)
I have added it to my observation program

Hi HB,

I have added this target to my observing program.

Regards,

Josch

Affiliation
Vereniging Voor Sterrenkunde, Werkgroep Veranderlijke Sterren (Belgium) (VVS)
Mag 18 object

Hi HB,

first images show an object at the position of the target with mag. 18.5 in 4x240 sec V Filter images summed up.

Josch

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Thanks for joining in

Cool, that looks consistent with what other people got so far.

There is a known galactic GAIA source very close to the SWIFT XRT position but I think it is unclear why it would cause a strong X-ray transient?

CS

HB



 

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Results:

And here is the ATEL with the results:

https://www.astronomerstelegram.org/?read=16531

Given that the optical target was relatively faint and in the southern sky where fewer amateurs are, I think the response was great!

CS

HBE