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#1
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Hi,
I started tracking this nearby binary system back in summer 2004, and was intending to repeat my observations every other year in the hope of seeing some movement in my *limited* 8" Newt. I'd totally forgotten that I managed to do an article on it back then: http://www.astroscience.org/abdul-ahad/astrometry.htm Can't wait for summer to roll in so I could repeat the exercise and see if anything's changed :-) Is anyone here already on the ball with this? cheers, AA http://www.publishedauthors.net/aa_spaceagent/ |
#2
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![]() "Abdul Ahad" wrote in message oups.com... Hi, I started tracking this nearby binary system back in summer 2004, and was intending to repeat my observations every other year in the hope of seeing some movement in my *limited* 8" Newt. I'd totally forgotten that I managed to do an article on it back then: http://www.astroscience.org/abdul-ahad/astrometry.htm Can't wait for summer to roll in so I could repeat the exercise and see if anything's changed :-) Is anyone here already on the ball with this? cheers, AA http://www.publishedauthors.net/aa_spaceagent/ Good luck with o****ee |
#3
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Paul Schlyter wrote:
In article .com, It would have been easier to do this sone 20 years ago. when 70 Oph passed through periastron. In the 1980's I made some drawings of 70 Oph using a 4-inch refractor. After only a few years the motion was easily seen visually - 70 Oph had then moved through some 90 degrees in PA. Now its movement is much slower. True. Though having a telescope back in the 1980s that could resolve 70 Oph was something of a "dream" for me... I would be content seeing just some movement either in separation or PA, though the latter will now be tiny. The pair look set to continue to widen through 2020 when apastron will be reached, with a whopping max. separation of some 7.5 arc-secs. The other component I'm tracking with this star is its proper motion. With a near one full arc-second per year, it should become obvious in just a few years. AA http://www.publishedauthors.net/aa_spaceagent/ |
#4
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Paul Schlyter wrote:
The best candidate is Alfa Centauri, but perhaps you don't live far enough south to be able to see it. I wish! Perfect candidate for my amateur scope. [It's the target system in my new sci-fi novel 'First Ark to Alpha Centauri' :-) ] Other candidates could be Xi Ursae Majors and Gamma Virginis. The latter is very near perihelion right now, and the separation is so small that you'll see it as a single star. But do observe it every year during the next decade, and see that "single" star split in two! Yeah, Gamma Virginis is another pair I'm keen on following. I checked the ephemeris predictions from the US Naval Observatory's sixth orbit catalog: http://ad.usno.navy.mil/wds/orb6/orb6ephem.html The PA (degrees) and separations (arc-secs) are going to be as follows:- 2005: 168.1, 0.381 2006: 85.8, 0.439 2007: 50.5, 0.726 2008: 35.2, 0.997 2009: 26.2, 1.238 Luckily for me, the two stars are of near-equal brightnesses so I think in the next couple of years I'll start to see Gamma Vir as a 'double' for the first time... AA http://www.publishedauthors.net/aa_spaceagent/ |
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