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Circular No. 5766 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) NOVA OPHIUCHI 1993 R. H. McNaught, Anglo-Australian Observatory, provides the following position for N Oph 1993 from a film taken with the Uppsala Southern Schmidt telescope on Apr. 17.5 UT: R.A. = 17h22m04s.41, Decl. = -23 08'32".2 (equinox 1950.0; uncertainty 0".3 in each coordinate). This position does not correspond to any object on the SERC J survey plate (limiting mag about 21.5) taken 1976 May 29, on a UKST I plate taken 1980 Aug. 5, on an ESO B plate taken 1976 Apr. 5, or on an ESO R plate taken 1984 July 25. The nearest star measured from the J survey was at mag about 18.5 located 2".6 east and 3".2 south of the nova. A star of mag about 12 is located at R.A. = 17h21m58s.22, Decl. = -23 07'42".9. Photometry by A. C. Gilmore, Mt. John University Observatory, obtained in poor conditions with the 0.6-m f/13 reflector (reference star HR 6473): Apr. 18.49 UT, V = 9.66, B-V = +0.79, U-B = -0.17. SUPERNOVA 1993J IN NGC 3031 H. U. Zimmermann, Max-Planck-Institut fur Extraterrestrische Physik (MPE); W. Lewin and E. Magnier, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; P. Predehl, G. Hasinger, W. Pietsch, B. Aschenbach, and J. Trumper, MPE; G. Fabbiano, Center for Astrophysics; J. van Paradijs, University of Amsterdam; L. Lubin, Princeton University; and R. Petre, Goddard Space Flight Center, communicate: "SN 1993J has been observed with the ROSAT Observatory on six occasions between Apr. 3 (IAUC 5748 and 5750) and Apr. 13. The exposures were made on Apr. 3, 7, 9, 10, 12, and 13 and lasted between 1000 and 3000 s each. A linear fit to the count rates (0.1-2.4 keV) shows a decrease of about 30 percent in 10 days. Our observations are inconsistent with a constant count rate at a confidence level higher than 99.9 percent. This seems to support models that predict a decay in the x-ray intensity on timescales of a few weeks to months." COMET SHOEMAKER-LEVY (1993e) Total visual magnitude estimates (cf. IAUC 5745): Apr. 1.03 UT, 13.9 (H. Mikuz, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 0.20-m Baker-Schmidt camera + CCD + V filter); Apr. 1.73, 14.0 (A. Nakamura, Kuma, Ehime, Japan, 0.60-m reflector); 12.28, 13.3 (A. Hale, Las Cruces, NM, 0.41-m reflector); 14.13, 12.8 (J. E. Bortle, Stormville, NY, 0.50-m reflector); 14.59, 13.9 (Nakamura). 1993 April 18 (5766) Daniel W. E. Green
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