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ASTROMETRIC UPDATE:
OCCULTATION BY (640) BRAMBILLA - 2000 MARCH 14

THIS UPDATE REPLACES THE PREVIOUS UPDATE OF 8 MARCH.


CHECK THIS PAGE REGULARLY FOR FURTHER UPDATES AND CHANGES TO THE TRACK.

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[Prediction by Edwin Goffin]

[Prediction using OCCULT software]

[Detailed finder chart by Jan Manek]

Goffin's predicted path covers eastern Tasmania, a path running from the Gippsland region of Victoria through to the Cairns area of far north Queensland before crossing Papua New Guinea near Port Moresby. The path generated in OCCULT lies a full 1.1" to the west and around 4.5 minutes earlier. It misses the Australian land mass by around 100 km from Exmouth in Western Australia, crossing the island of Lombok, Sumbawa and western Sulawesi in Indonesia and clippping the south eastern portions of Mindanao in the Phillipines.


UPDATE: 14 March 2000

This prediction update is supplied by Jan Manek of the Stefanik Observatory, Prague, and is based on USNO/Flagstaff and TMO astrometry for the minor planet and the TYC star position.

Summary:

The update suggests a shift to the west of around 1.4" relative to Goffin's predicted path and around 1 minute earlier. This lies around 0.3" to the west of the path suggested by OCCULT and 3 minutes earlier. The path misses the Australian land mass by around 600 km from Exmouth in Western Australia (13:51 UT), crosses central Java near Surabaya (13:55 UT), Kalimantan (Borneo) (13:57-14:00 UT), along Palawan (14:02) and southern Luzon just south east of Manila in The Phillipines (14:04 UT). As such this path is very similar to the previous update with the difference being around 30 seconds later.

THE EVENT AT ONE GLIMPSE:

The Occultation Path: Data for the target star:
Data for the minor planet: Data for the event:

Brambilla Update

IMPORTANT NOTE!

Astrometric updates such as these should not be taken as definitive, but rather only as an indication of where the true track may lie relative to the original predicted track. Observers must bear in mind that later astrometry, in which the target star is measured in the same field as the asteroid, may still reveal substantial changes to the predicted track and time of the event. For this reason it is most important that observers far from the predicted track still monitor the event.

Use these links for further information:
[Planetary Occultations] [Using the Predictions]
[Observing Details] [Timing Details] [Reporting Details] [Report Form]
[Asteroid Occultation Results]


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