An occultation was timed by Ross Skilton at Tayforth, Wanganui, NZ.
View the updated prediction.
Observers: 1 R. Skilton, Tayforth, NZ 2(-) J. Burt, Gisborne, NZ 3(M) B. Loader, Darfield, NZ 4(M) T. Butt, Te Horo, NZ 5(C) A. Dodson, Waitara, NZ 6(P) Predicted Track M = Miss C = Cloud
Discussion:
The circle above is plotted at the expected 166km diameter of Alexandra.
Ross Skilton in Wanganui timed a 4.0 second occultation, this being somewhat shorter than the expected maximum 5.7 second duration assuming a circular asteroid. Thus, Skilton was some distance from the centre of the track. John Burt in Gisborne also saw the event, but owing to a problem his event timings were lost.
The negative observations of Loader and Butt however provide constraints which indicate that Skilton's chord was nearer the eastern side of the asteroid, thus showing that the actual event track was very close to that of the prediction. The position of Andy Dodson in Taranaki is also plotted; he would have seen an event if he had not been clouded out.
Observational Data:
Observer's Name : Ross Skilton Aperture (cm) : 20 Focal length (cm) : 203 Type (e.g. SCT; Newtonian) : SCT Magnification : 32mm EP giving 64x Observing site name : Tayforth Longitude (DD MM SS ; East +ve) : 174 59 55.2 East Latitude (DD MM SS ; South -ve) : -39 54 55.3 South Height above Sealevel (metres) : 37 Geodetic Datum (e.g.WGS84,NZ1949): WGS84 Height Datum (if known) : MSL Sky Transparency (Delete two) : Poor Star Image Stability (Delete two): Fair Other Conditions: (Wind, Clouds, Lights, etc.): ~60% low cloud cover, dark ,light breeze Time Source (e.g. WWVH, GPS) : WWVH Recording method (e.g. tape) : Stopwatch Could you see the Asteroid? : No Approx. Limiting Magnitude : 12.5 | Estimated | Universal Time | Reaction | Accuracy, Remarks h m s | Time (sec) | Started Observing : 10:31:00 Disappearance At : 10:32:8.8 Reappearance At : 10:32:12.8 Stopped Observing : 10:33:00 Was your reaction time (also known as Personal Equation) subtracted from any of the above timings? : Yes If YES, state value : 0.4 sec D&R If you could tell, in which direction did the asteroid pass relative to the star (Delete three) : na ADDITIONAL COMMENTS: Poor weather conditions prevented me from centering the star in the video cam so I reverted to a stopwatch synced to WWVH at 10.27UT. Observer's Name : John Burt Aperture (cm) : 20cm Focal length (cm) : 1200cm Type (e.g. SCT; Newtonian) : Newtonian Magnification : 48x Observing site name : Possum Observatory, Patutahi Longitude (DD MM SS ; East +ve) : 177 54 00 Latitude (DD MM SS ; South -ve) : -38 37 02 Height above Sealevel (metres) : 1 Geodetic Datum (e.g.WGS84,NZ1949): Sky Transparency (Delete two) : Good Star Image Stability (Delete two): Good Other Conditions: (Wind, Clouds, Lights, etc.): Good Time Source (e.g. WWVH, GPS) : Recording method (e.g. tape) : Could you see the Asteroid? : no Approx. Limiting Magnitude : 13 | Estimated | Universal Time | Reaction | Accuracy, Remarks h m s | Time (sec) | Started Observing : 10:25:00 Disappearance At : 10:32:?? Problems with timing – see comments Reappearance At : 10:32:?? Approx 3 seconds Stopped Observing : 10:38:00 Was your reaction time (also known as Personal Equation) subtracted from any of the above timings? : no ADDITIONAL COMMENTS: I very diligently did the timings, but pushed the wrong button on the timer I was using (tape batteries ran flat *sigh*) and lost the record. The disappearance was approximately 3 seconds, but thats just a very rough guessimate. I know it was between 10:32:00 and 10:33:00 UT as I heard JD in the observatory shout out a time-stamp. Observer's Name : Brian Loader Aperture (cm) : 25.4 Focal length (cm) : 250 Type (e.g. SCT; Newtonian) : SCT Magnification : n/a Observing site name : Darfield Longitude (DD MM SS ; East +ve) : +172° 06' 24.4" E Latitude (DD MM SS ; South -ve) : -43° 28' 52.9" S Height above Sealevel (metres) : 210 Geodetic Datum (e.g.WGS84,NZ1949): WGS84 Height Datum (if known) : MSL Sky Transparency (Delete two) : Good Star Image Stability (Delete two): Poor Other Conditions: (Wind, Clouds, Lights, etc.): Occasional wind shake Time Source (e.g. WWVH, GPS) : GPS/KIWI Recording method (e.g. tape) : VIDEO Could you see the Asteroid? : no Approx. Limiting Magnitude : 10.8 | Estimated | Universal Time | Reaction | Accuracy, Remarks h m s | Time (sec) | Started Observing : 10:28 Stopped Observing : 10:36 ADDITIONAL COMMENTS: No event. Poor unstable image. Observer's Name : Terry Butt Aperture (cm) : 250 Focal length (cm) : 1600 Type (e.g. SCT; Newtonian) : SCT Magnification : ? Observing site name : Te Horo Longitude (DD MM SS ; East +ve) : 175 07 26.53 E Latitude (DD MM SS ; South -ve) : 40 48 47.31 S Height above Sealevel (metres) : 52 Geodetic Datum (e.g.WGS84,NZ1949): WGS84 Height Datum (if known) : MSL Sky Transparency (Delete two) : Good Star Image Stability (Delete two): Fair TIMINGS: (PLEASE REPORT IN UNIVERSAL TIME) Time Source (e.g. WWVH, GPS) : Kiwi OSD Recording method (e.g. tape) : VCR Could you see the Asteroid? : No Approx. Limiting Magnitude : | Estimated | Universal Time | Reaction | Accuracy, Remarks h m s | Time (sec) | Started Observing : 10 30 00 Disappearance At : NO CHANGE SEEN IMAGE RATHER UNSTABLE Stopped Observing : 10 34 00 ADDITIONAL COMMENTS: Clouding over at 1040 UT
[Top of Page][Return to Home Page]