Circular No. 2792 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION Postal Address: Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. Cable Address: SATELLITES, NEWYORK Western Union: RAPID SATELLITE CAMBMASS PERIODIC COMET SCHWASSMANN-WACHMANN 2 (1973l) The following precise positions have been reported: 1975 UT R.A. (1950) Decl. m2 Observer Apr. 11.31181 12 29 38.39 + 2 43 32.8 Krumenaker 18.40000 12 25 22.84 + 3 08 10.9 15.7 Gilmore A. C. Gilmore (Carter Observatory). 41-cm Cassegrain reflector. L. Krumenaker (Warner and Swasey Observatory). 61-91-cm Schmidt reflector. COMET BRADFIELD (1975d) The following precise positions have been reported: 1975 UT R.A. (1950) Decl. m2 Observer May 5.31492 4 59 00.32 - 8 44 11.9 12.7 Kilmartin 5.32883 4 59 03.78 - 8 43 53.1 " 12.31190 5 28 27.09 - 6 25 07.9 13.3 Gilmore 12.32475 5 28 30.35 - 6 24 53.7 " 19.35611 5 56 43.10 - 4 12 39.9 Herald 19.36667 5 56 45.23 - 4 12 28.4 " June 1.35833 6 44 45.51 - 0 39 30.0 " A. C. Gilmore and P. M. Kilmartin (Carter Observatory). 41-cm f/13.5 Cassegrain reflector. D. Herald (Woden, near Canberra). 31-cm reflector. COMET LOVAS (1974c) A. C. Gilmore, Carter Observatory, communicates the following precise observations obtained by him with a 41-cm Cassegrain reflector: 1975 UT R.A. (1950) Decl. m2 May 12.39315* 13 22 39.86 -69 47 06.2 15.0 12.43968* 13 22 31.64 -69 47 19.9 22.45291 12 55 51.90 -70 15 58.6 15.2 22.47513 12 55 48.70 -70 16 00.4 * comet visible in Cassegrain as a very faint, diffuse patch about 1 arcmin in diameter. NOVA SCUTI 1975 W. P. Bidelman reports that image-tube spectrograms covering the 4700-6800 A region obtained on 1975 June 19 with the Warner and Swasey 91-cm reflector by A. J. Weitenbeck, S-G. Lee, and L. E. Krumenaker confirm the nova nature of Wild's object noted in IAUC 2791. H-alpha and H-beta are strong and broad emission lines, of widths about 55 and 30 A, respectively. The continuum is weak, but absorption H-alpha centered about 35 A, or 1600 km/sec, from the center of the emission appears to be present. [O I] 6300 A is also seen, though weak. Janet Mattei of the American Association of Variable Star Observers reports that on two photographs taken by Peter Garnavich of Bowie, Maryland, with a 200-mm focal length lens and Tri-X film on June 9.18 UT the nova is well seen and its brightness is estimated at about 7.3 to 7.4 by comparison with SAO 142879 and SAO 142699. A Damon patrol plate exposed by J. H. Bulger at the Agassiz Station, Harvard College Observatory, on June 11.206 UT shows the nova. C.-Y. Shao finds it to be 7.2 ptg by visual examination. C.-Y. Shao measured the following position of the nova on a plate taken with the 41-cm astrograph: R.A. = 18 52 44.15 Decl. = - 7 47 00.2 (1950) Shao has identified a very blue star on the Palomar Sky Atlas with an approximate magnitude 18.5 ptg at the position of the nova. Photoelectric spectrum scans were obtained by R. E. McCrosky, G. Schwartz, and C. A. Whitney on June 22.2 and 23.2 UT with the 150-cm reflector of Agassiz Station covering 6800-3500 A. The spectrum shows broad emission of H, He I, N II, [N II], N III, [O I], and an ultra-violet continuum. Photoelectric photometry by C. A. Whitney on the Johnson system with the 41-cm reflector of the Agassiz Station gives the following magnitudes and colors relative to HD 175154 (SAO 142778): 1975 UT Delta-V Delta-(B - V) June 20.183 -0.18 +0.12 21.188 -0.66 +0.16 21.264 -0.73 +0.16 21.299 -0.75 +0.13 22.240 -0.78 +0.13 23.275 -0.57 +0.12 One night's observations give the following results for HD 175154: V = 9.03, B - V = +0.19. 1975 June 25 (2792) Owen Gingerich
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