On the night of May 30/31, 2021, under good conditions, I acquired images of
These are the first morning observations of the targets since they disappeared into the sunset in late February. The quality won't be great until they rise higher in the sky before dawn, but it's good to start working on them again.
This is one of the stars that a capstone student may study over the next year in a project involving parallax. Ross 248 is a relatively faint red star surrounded by many other stars of similar brightness, so it's a good candidate for high-precision parallax measurements.
These observations involved:
Notes from the night:
The object is (currently) near position
RA = 23:41:55.27 Dec = +44:10:06.38 (J2000)
A chart of the field is shown below. The size of the chart is about 41 x 27 arcminutes. The noisy area at right (West) is the shadow of the guider's pickoff mirror.
I've marked the location of several comparison stars.
star UCAC4 B V r ------------------------------------------------------------------------- A UCAC4 671-120730 12.617 10.689 B UCAC4 671-120688 C UCAC4 671-120749 10.987 10.663 P kappa And 4.06 4.14 --------------------------------------------------------------------------
I took a photo of the finder TV's screen when pointing to Ross 248; this could be a useful reference for the future:
The dark current was normal this evening.
The sky value decreased smoothly as the sky darkened after sunset. Fine.
The number of objects detected.
The FWHM was decent.
Here are the positions I've measured so far. The most recent measurements (at bottom right, red) show a big scatter due to the low altitude tonight.
Like Ross 248, GX And is a nearby (binary) star which will be the target of a parallax project in the coming year. One of the two components is bright -- about mag V = 8 -- so one must use short exposures to prevent it from saturating the detector. That may mean that this system isn't as easy to measure as Ross 248 or some others.
The object is currently close to this position:
RA = 00:18:28.4 Dec = +44:01:31 (J2000)
but it does have a very high proper motion.
A chart of the field is shown below. The size of the chart is about 41 x 27 arcminutes. The noisy area at right (West) is the shadow of the guider's pickoff mirror.
The two components of the GX And binary sit inside the box. I've marked the location of several comparison stars as well.
star UCAC4 B V r ----------------------------------------------------------- A 671-001473 9.939 9.790 B 670-001639 9.413 8.472 C 671-001509 12.712 11.421 11.001 -----------------------------------------------------------
I took a photo of the finder TV's screen when pointing to GX And; this could be a useful reference for the future:
Using the same techniques as described for earlier nights, I matched detected stellar positions to the Gaia DR2 catalog.
The target is clearly moving in the positive RA direction, as we would expect from its known (large) proper motion. The big scatter in tonight's measurements (yellow symbols at right edge of graph) is due to the low altitude.
Last modified 5/31/2021 by MWR.