Circular No. 5549 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION Postal Address: Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. Telephone 617-495-7244/7440/7444 (for emergency use only) TWX 710-320-6842 ASTROGRAM CAM EASYLINK 62794505 MARSDEN@CFA or GREEN@CFA (.SPAN, .BITNET or .HARVARD.EDU) SUPERNOVA 1992Z IN ANONYMOUS GALAXY M. Della Valle, European Southern Observatory, reports: " Inspection of a spectrogram (range 400-840 nm, resolution about 2 nm) of SN 1992Z (cf. IAUC 5533), obtained with the New Technology Telescope (+ EMMI) at La Silla on June 23.1 UT under non-photometric conditions, shows this object to be a type-II supernova. The spectrum is dominated by the emission of H-alpha coupled with a P-Cyg profile. The expansion velocity corresponding to the difference between the rest wavelength in the galaxy's frame and the minimum of the absorption is about 8000 km/s. " NOVA SCORPII 1992 T. E. Harrison, Mt. Stromlo Observatory, reports: "The following infrared photometry of N Sco 1992 was obtained with the Siding Springs 2.3-m telescope: June 19.57 UT, J = 6.06, H = 5.74, K = 5.34, L = 4.59, M = 3.39 (errors < 0.05 mag, except for M, which is +/- 0.10). The resulting energy distribution is peculiar. The J-L magnitudes can be fitted by a blackbody of T about 3000 K. However, the flux at M is well above such an energy distribution. The large excess at M suggests that significant emission from the CO fundamental (4.65 microns) may be occuring. The J, H, and K photometry can also be fitted by free-free energy distribution, assuming the visual extinction is Av about 1." Further visual magnitude estimates (cf. IAUC 5546): June 11.06 UT, 7.8 (V. F. de Assis Neto, Sao Francisco de Oliveira, Brazil); 11.39, 8.4 (P. F. Williams, Heathcote, N.S.W.); 12.03, 7.9 (de Assis Neto); 12.97, 8.2 (de Assis Neto); 16.52, 8.7 (P. F. Williams, Heathcote, N.S.W.); 20.42, 8.9 (G. Garradd, Tamworth, N.S.W.); 21.41, 8.9 (Garradd). V CORONAE AUSTRINAE This R CrB-type variable star has shown a slow decline in recent months, as indicated by the following visual magnitude estimates by P. F. Williams, Heathcote, N.S.W. (communicated by R. H. McNaught, Anglo-Australian Observatory): Mar. 3.74 UT, 9.9; 10.67, 10.1; 26.78, 10.3; Apr. 4.79, 10.5; 30.66, 10.7; May 4.57, 10.7; 13.52, 10.8; 24.48, 11.3; 27.51, 11.4; 31.52, 11.4; June 3.51, 11.3. 1992 June 24 (5549) Daniel W. E. Green
Our Web policy. Index to the CBAT/MPC/ICQ pages.