Creative Commons License Copyright © Michael Richmond. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Observations of Lictoria: Mar 27, 2002 EST

Last night (Mar 27, 2002 EST), several of us took CCD images of the asteroid 1107 Lictoria with the RIT Observatory's 10-inch telescope. We used no filter, because the Moon was shining so brightly that we couldn't pick out the asteroid in pictures taken with the V-band filter (removing the filter made the asteroid brighter, but the background sky brighter, too, which probably didn't help in the end ...). Each image was 15 seconds long, and we took five sets of 20:
  image names    EST start      filter    exptime
--------------------------------------------------
   1107a         10:03:40 PM    none       15       1107a.001, 1107a.002, etc.
   1107b         10:25:50       none       15
   1107c         10:45:40       none       15
   1107d         11:09:00       none       15
   1107e         11:29:30       none       15

Here's one sample image:

You can find copies of all the images at

http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys559/lectures/mar27_2002/

Each image has a name like 1107a.001.fit; so the full URL to an individual image would look like:

http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys559/lectures/mar27_2002/1107a.001.fit
Beware: these files are in a format called FITS, which ordinary browsers and text editors will interpret as a mess of binary data.

Your job today:

  1. Take a subset of the images (I will assign them).
  2. Use the Sky Image Processor (SIP) tool to open your images.
  3. Use the Show FITS header option to determine the time when each of your exposures started. The time recorded is EST.
  4. Convert each time to UT.
  5. Convert each time to Julian Date. The full JD will look something like this: 2,452,361.51467. Record the a value which is
             truncated JD  =  JD  -  2,452,000
        
    and keep 4 digits after the decimal place. So, your values should look something like 361.5147.

    At this point, turn to the person sitting next to you. If he's behind you, help him until he catches up.

  6. Load the first image in your subset and display it. Modify the display parameters to show faint details; the Automatic Image Adjustment is pretty good. Make the image show black stars on a white background ("negative" display). Print a hardcopy once it looks good.
  7. Use JPL Horizons ephemeris to make a table showing the position of the asteroid 1107 Lictoria last night, between 9 PM and midnight EST. Print out the table.
  8. Use Aladin to generate a finding chart for the field. Choose the position of the asteroid at 11:00 PM. If you can zoom back to 2/3, so that the window shows a larger portion of the sky, do so. Print it out.
  9. Now, the fun part. Try to figure out the orientation of the CCD image. You may need to rotate or flip the chart to match it. You may even need to look through the back of the paper.

    At this point, turn to the person sitting next to you. If he's behind you, help him until he catches up.

  10. Try to find the asteroid. It may help to do this:

  11. Once you have found the asteroid, use the Analyze menu item to select Determine Centroid or Instrumental Magnitude.... Follow the instructions on the SIP Photometry page to determine the instrumental magnitudes of three objects in the image: I will point out the stars "B" and "C" you should use. Choose an aperture box which is 7 pixels on a side, with a fixed 7-pixel background box located off to one side, in the clear sky background.
  12. For each one of your images, record the instrumental magnitudes of the asteroid and stars "B" and "C".
  13. Make a table which shows:
                           instr mag  instr mag    instr mag
          truncated JD      asteroid       B          C
         --------------------------------------------------
    
    
  14. Type your table into an Excel spreadsheet. Save the spreadsheet as Excel, and also save it in comma-separated-value format.

Creative Commons License Copyright © Michael Richmond. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.