Circular No. 3436 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION Postal Address: Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. TWX 710-320-6842 ASTROGRAM CAM Telephone 617-864-5758 1947 XC = 1979 XA Further precise positions have been reported as follows: 1979 UT R. A. (1950) Decl. Mag. Observer Dec. 14.26389 2 30 52.21 +14 00 14.4 14 Bowell 16.46424 2 19 01.5 +13 18 04 Furuta 16.47014 2 18 59.3 +13 17 57 " 17.15417 2 15 11.22 +13 03 59.1 Giclas 17.61042 2 12 35.20 +12 54 27.9 15.0 Seki 17.63090 2 12 28.63 +12 54 04.0 " 18.00833 2 10 22.45 +12 46 06.0 McCrosky E. Bowell and H. L. Giclas (Lowell Observatory). Measurer: M. L. Kantz. The Dec. 14 position corrects that on IAUC 3432. T. Furuta (Tokai) and T. Seki (Geisei). Communicated by Y. Kozai and H. Kosai, Tokyo Astronomical Observatory. R. E. McCrosky, C.-Y. Shao and G. Schwartz (Harvard Observatory). Photoelectric observations on Dec. 16 and 17, made by Bowell and reduced by A. Harris, gave B-V = +0.82 +/- 0.02, U-B = +0.36 +/- 0.03. V varied over 14.45-14.55, apparently with a long period. The number of revolutions since 1947 is still ambiguous. The following ephemeris continues that on IAUC 3432: 1979/80 ET R. A. (1950) Decl. Delta r B Dec. 28 1 08.83 + 8 34.6 Jan. 2 0 34.47 + 5 58.2 0.235 1.011 15.4 7 23 57.55 + 3 00.4 12 23 17.93 - 0 17.9 0.222 0.893 15.8 17 22 36.14 - 3 50.5 SS 433 S. P. Maran and R. D. Chapman, Goddard Space Flight Center, report that analysis of the 10-GHz measurements by Seaquist et al. (1979, A.J. 84, 1037) indicates an apparent variation with a period of ~ 6.39 days. This variation may correspond to the visible-light periodicity reported by Kemp et al. (IAUC 3421). If so, this result is consistent with the hypothesis that the high-frequency radio emission of SS 433 is thermal, although the low-frequency emission may be nonthermal. 1979 December 21 (3436) Brian G. Marsden
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