Circular No. 2953 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 X-RAY BURSTS R. H. Becker, S. H. Pravdo, P. J. Serlemitsos and J. H. Swank, Goddard Space Flight Center, report that the cosmic x-ray spectroscopy experiment on OSO-8 has detected two x-ray bursts from a region of the sky centered on R.A. = 18h36m, Decl. = -22o.7 (equinox 1950.0). The bursts occurred on Mar. 27.581 and 29.437 UT, each with risetimes < 2s and decay times ~ 15s. Neither of the bursts could have come from any of the previously identified burst sources. If the two bursts have a common origin the implied error box has corners at R.A. = 18h47m.4, Decl. = -18o20'; 18h26m.2, -27o17'; 18h14m.2, -19o19'; 18h59m.2, -25o43'. The box contains the source 3U 1832-23. The bursts had a maximum intensity of ~ 40 percent of the Crab between 2 and 20 keV. These results are based on the 5 percent of the data from this period that is now available. J. Hoffman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, informs us that his final statement on IAUC 2946 applies only to the burst sources within 1o of the galactic center. The SAS-3 Group observed MXB1730-335 (cf. IAUC 2922) for some five hours around Apr. 27.85 UT and found no burst activity to a level ~< 0.08 of the count rate at burst maximum observed previously. V616 MONOCEROTIS D. Ya. Martynov, Sternberg Astronomical Institute, communicates the following photographic magnitudes by S. Yu. Shugarov: Mar. 29, 15.7; 31, 15.8; Apr. 1, 16.1; 2, 16.5; 3, 16.9; 4, 17.2; and a visual magnitude: Apr. 23, 17.5. Photoelectric observation by V. M. Lyutyj: Mar. 31, V = 14.72, B-V = +1.02, U-B = -0.76. V1500 CYGNI Further to IAUC 2926 and 2938, R. Wood and P. J. Andrews, Royal Greenwich Observatory, write that a V exposure with the 66-cm refractor does show a star surrounded by a pronounced ring some 15" in diameter. Considering that the refractor has a steep color curve away from the B region, they suggest that the 'star' is the in-focus image of the continuum near 5600 A, while the 'ring' is merely an out-of-focus image of the very strong emission at 5007 A. Visual magnitude estimates by R. Lukas, Wilhelm Foerster Observatory: Apr. 18.95 UT, 10.9; 29.93, 11.2; May 9.92, 11.4. 1976 May 18 (2953) Brian G. Marsden
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