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ASTROMETRIC UPDATE:
OCCULTATION BY (40) HARMONIA - 2001 SEPTEMBER 16

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[Prediction by Edwin Goffin]

[Prediction using OCCULT software]

Goffin's path neatly squeezes through Bass Strait close to local daybreak. The path given by OCCULT lies slightly to the south shaving the northern most tips of Tasmania.


UPDATE: 14 September 2001

This prediction update has been computed by Steve Preston of Medina, Washington (state) in the United States based on astrometry from Ron Stone of the US Naval Observatory - Flagstaff Station supplemented with data from the AstDys database. The Tycho 2 position of the target star has been used.

Summary:

This updated path is virtually identical to that given by Goffin and only around 10 seconds earlier. The path runs from the Southern Ocean through Bass Strait close to local sunrise (19:42 UT). The only landmass to lie within the nominal path is the far north-western tip of Tasmania and the southern tip of Wilson's Promentory. However, Melbourne lies within the error tolerance of this calculation at 19:41:30 UT. The event will occur in twilight but since the star is fairly bright, it should still be achievable in Melbourne with larger aperture telescopes. Hobart and Canberra also lie near the edge of the error band although the stronger twilight will make observation difficult at these sites.

The target star is the brighter and southern component of a wide double (60") - the two star images are merged in the predictions prepared by Edwin Goffin.

THE EVENT AT ONE GLIMPSE:

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

Harmonia 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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