We are excited to announce the launch of our new forums! You can access it forums.aavso.org. For questions, please see our blog post. The forums at aavso.org/forum have become read-only.
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:
We ask for your feedback in order to help us improve these applications. Please send feedback for the applications above to feedback@aavso.org. Note: please avoid duplicating submissions across the two submit applications.
When you observe this star be careful with its companion 12" to the NW.
It would be nice if someone could get a nice light curve of this star since it gets fainter than 16.3 V while up to now we only have ASAS coverage and see what the ASAS light curve looks like (data from the two stars blended).
Frank:
I tried a couple of other scales and two different programs to find comps for this target. I don't think that any exist?
Ken
Hi,
Maybe the star doesn't have a well defined comparison sequence. A 6.7 degrees map centered on it shows a few stars, but quite far away:
WebObs doesn't list any previous observations - it could be that you are the first person who'd like to observe it.
Alex.
Frank,
When you observe this star be careful with its companion 12" to the NW.
It would be nice if someone could get a nice light curve of this star since it gets fainter than 16.3 V while up to now we only have ASAS coverage and see what the ASAS light curve looks like (data from the two stars blended).
Cheers,
Sebastian