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nova Cep
Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2014 1:14 am
by Robin Leadbeater
I was observing sn2014J tonight when the report of nova Cep came in. I am on it with the ALPY now low in the North (A rare advantage of being at 55 N)
The raw spectrum is showing a nice P cygni profile H alpha
Robin
Re: nova Cep
Posted: Tue Mar 11, 2014 5:47 am
by Francois Teyssier
Excellent !
Hâte de voir le spectre traité
Cheers
François
Re: nova Cep
Posted: Fri Mar 14, 2014 2:34 am
by Robin Leadbeater
Poor conditions tonight with a bright moon and mist. There have been big changes in the spectrum in the last 3 days with the Balmer lines growing dramatically. The fog has now rolled in though so it is time for bed.
Robin
Re: nova Cep
Posted: Thu May 15, 2014 2:27 pm
by Hubert Boussier
Hello Robin,
I have Just a question from a beginner in spectroscopy. I do not understand what kind of picture you attached to you e mail on the upper left: nova_Cep.pic.
I see the spectrum of the observed star which seems to be pasted on a star field generated by a sky map software. It looks like a picture done with a star analyzer, but with only the spectrum of the nova.
Thanks by advance for helping me to understand.
All the best
Re: nova Cep
Posted: Thu May 15, 2014 3:30 pm
by Robin Leadbeater
Hello Hubert,
It is a screen shot from Visual Spec showing the raw spectrum image from the ALPY 600 without any dark subtraction. (The pic file was generated by IRIS where I subtracted the background) The "stars" are just hot pixels. I admit, some of them look rather strange. I think the screen grabbing software must have produced some artifacts.
Cheers
Robin
Re: nova Cep
Posted: Thu May 15, 2014 5:17 pm
by Hubert Boussier
OK I see, I have been mislead by the shape of the hot pixels, some of them looks like Airy star diffraction patterns.
Thanks