Circular No. 4245 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 617-495-7244/7440/7444 NOVA VULPECULAE 1984 No. 2 G. L. Grasdalen, University of Wyoming, writes: "Broad-band infrared photometry of Nova Vul 1984 No. 2 obtained by R. D. Gehrz, University of Minnesota, using the Wyoming Infrared Observatory (WIRO) indicates the development of an intense emission feature in the L' (3.6 microns) band beginning 1985 mid-Oct. and steadily increasing through 1986 May. Circular variable filter (CVF) observations by G. Grasdalen, M. Greenhouse, T. Hayward and J. Benson (WIRO), beginning in late May and continuing to the present, reveal lines at 1.96 (intensity ~ 0.13), 2.04 (0.06), 2.48 (0.19), 2.91 (0.06), 3.03 (0.42), 3.66 (1.00), 3.92 (0.08) and 4.05 (0.08) microns. The intensities given are relative to the strongest line at 3.66 microns and have not been corrected for possible telluric absorption and relative CVF transmission. The line-to-continuum ratio for the 3.66-microns line exceeds 100 at the 1.3-percent resolution of the CVF. The 2- and 3-microns spectra are very similar to the spectra of (Nova) V1500 Cyg (1975) reported by Grasdalen and Joyce (1976, Nature 259, 187). T. Jones, University of Minnesota, obtained infrared photometry of Nova Vul 1984 No. 2 during 1986 July 30-Aug. 1 using the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility. The resulting magnitudes were: J = 10.36, H = 10.79, K = 9.23, L' = 6.56, M = 6.01, N = 3.61. In addition, narrow filters across the 10-microns window gave the following magnitudes: [7.8 microns] = 2.37, [8.7] = 4.12, [9.8] = 3.93, [10.3] = 3.69, [11.6] = 3.43 and [12.5] = 2.33. CVF observations at WIRO by Hayward and Benson on Aug. 11 show that the excess in the 7.8- microns band is due to a strong line at ~ 7.6 microns, probably to be identified with [Ne VI]. The strength of the line is sufficient to account for the 7.8-microns flux observed by Jones." NSV 6708 Further to IAUC 4233 and 4241, R. McNaught, Siding Spring Observatory, remarks that the identity of NSV 6708 = BV 420 with CoD -39 9021 is uncertain, since the variable lies 33" north of a constant star (CoD -39 9021?) of mag 11. His examination of plates in the Harvard collection covering 1913-1921 and 1933-1952 shows NSV 6708 variable around B = 10 in mid-1917 and in the range B = 11-13 at times during 1919-1937; generally it was fainter than mag 13 and not recorded. McNaught's Siding Spring patrol plates show that the current maximum follows a gradual rise at the end of 1985, already to mag 7.5 in 1986 mid-Feb. 1986 August 19 (4245) Brian G. Marsden
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