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I received the following information from David Dunham of the International
Occultation and Timing Association, and want to share it with you. Ed Flaspoehler, AAAA www.astromax.com Details of the following items can be found on the IOTA Web site at http://iota.jhuapl.edu . Steve Preston's asteroidal occultation update Web site is at http://www.asteroidoccultation.com . Some further information is after the list of topics. 1. Sept. 5th occultation by 107 Camilla & satellite; observers in most of North America should look for an occultation. 2. Sept. 11/12 7th-mag. Palisana occultation - the path is uncertain by 1.2 path-widths! Read about a newly calculated path 1.2 path-widths north of the last posted one. 3. New reductions of the occultations near/during the IOTA meeting in California are now available, with an interesting result for (64) Angelina. 4. European Symposium on Occultation Projects 2004 was recently held in Paris with many interesting papers that are listed from a link given at my Web site. 5. The Latest Occultation Observing and Results Presentations 6. Aug. 21st Occultation by the small asteroid (1903) Adzhimushkaj observed from California. __________________________________________________ __ 1. Observations by observers from MOST OF NORTH AMERICA are sought for the occultation and appulse of 11.8-mag. TYC 5244-00017-1 (in Pisces s. of the Circlet at J2000 RA 23h 28m 16.5s, Dec. -2 deg. 25' 24") by the 222-km asteroid 107 Camilla just before 9h UT on Sept. 5 UT, conveniently early Sunday morning (late Saturday night) of the long Labor-Day weekend. Adaptive optics observations show that Camilla has a sizeable satellite orbiting some 1000 km from the asteroid, but unfortunately, recent observations were attempted but could not be made due to weather, so we don't know where the satellite path will go. In any case, observers should get finder charts, path information (look at the USA/Canada map, with time marked along the path at 1-minute intervals, of 8h UT), and other details of this event from Steve Preston's Web site and are encouraged to observe (the nominal path goes over central Arizona to Iowa and central Ontario, just a little north of the Sept. 11/12 Palisana path). Those within 1000 km of the central line (in the sky plane; a little more on the ground) are encouraged to monitor the star for a possible occultation from 2 minutes before to 2 minutes after the predicted closest approach time for your location. This includes all of the contiguous "lower 48" States except n.w. Washington and Florida; all of southern Canada except B.C., Edmonton, and Newfoundland (where twilight will be too strong). __________________________________________________ __ 2. Palisana Occ'n, problems and maps - updated 2004 Sept. 2 The occultation of 7.2-mag. SAO 36280 A = HIP 1642 A by the 76-km asteroid (914) Palisana may be the best occultation of 2004 in North America, with the occultation of the bright star visible from coast to coast, from Nova Scotia at 5:06 UT to central Baja California at 5:18 UT (of Sept. 12 UT), also the middle of a Saturday night local time. Unfortunately, the current prediction is much more uncertain than the formal errors imply because the star's proper motion can be calculated in two different ways that give a difference of about 1.2 path-widths in the path location, and we are not sure which is best. There's a small chance that new observations can resolve the situation. Find maps of both paths and finder charts, and read about the differences in an item near the top of my Web site. Also, Steve Preston reports that he will be calculating updates to the paths for both components on Sept. 3 or 4 after he receives the latest batch of observations of Palisana from Flagstaff to make the final update of Palisana's orbit. __________________________________________________ __ 3. IOTA Meeting in Calif. July 2 & 3 - updated 2004 Sept. 2 This year's IOTA meeting held at the Lewis Center in Apple Valley, California on July 2-3 was a huge success. Four of the five asteroidal occultations during the 7 days surrounding the meeting dates were successfully observed, with nearly final results now given on my Web site. Angelina was much smaller than expected because it's a bright E-class asteroid. Power Point and other files are available for most of the meeting presentations. __________________________________________________ __ 4. European Symposium on Occultation Projects 2004 The ESOP 2004 program is now available, directly at http://calys.obspm.fr/~ESOP2004/program.html . I found that it was best viewed with Netscape; many of the titles and lines were truncated when I viewed it with Internet Explorer. __________________________________________________ __ 5. The Latest Occultation Observing and Results Presentations On August 20 and 21, I gave two talks at the large Starfest 2004 star party in Ontario. My Power Point presentations for these are available on my Web site, but they are large files. 1st was "Observing Occultations", which describes occultations and methods to observe them, including visual and video techniques, and new information on how to set up to observe asteroidal occultations with remote video systems. 2nd was "Exploring the Cosmos with Occultations". __________________________________________________ __ 6. Aug. 21st Occultation by the small asteroid (1903) Adzhimushkaj observed from California - new 2004 Aug. 24. The occultation of a 9.7-mag. star by (1903) Adzhimushkaj was observed by Ed Morana and Richard Nolthenius in California. __________________________________________________ __ David Dunham, I.O.T.A., September 3, 2004 |
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