*See updates at
the bottom of the page*
finding charts in pdf and maps (09/Feb)
Dark
gray is night and light gray is astronomical twilight (Sun at less
than 18° below the horizon).
Shadow moves
from left to right, each red dot is separated by one minute,
the
nominal
occultation time on the map, is for the big red dot, the closest approach.
See finding
charts bellow.
Doted lines are the estimated error of the star position, but the error
can be bigger due to ephemeris offset!
Star
J2000 coordinates:
RA
16 30 13.3932
DEC -40 44 15.938
Day coordinates:
RA 16 31 04.86
DEC -40 45 40.97
Star R
mag
15
Star K mag
12.9
Magnitude
drop in R
3.3
Max. duration if
260km diameter
16 sec
Observation tips:
Absolute time accuracy is essential to connect together all the
observations after the fact. Check the time of your computer with many
sources (phone
talked hour, different internet sites, ideally with a GPS). As images
should be acquired for a long time (10min at least), its advised to
check the registered time right after and
right before the integrations, so if there is a drift, we can correct
it by having the difference.
Beware of the dead time between the images. If you manage an exposure
time
of 1 sec (for example), but have a read time of 2 sec, then there is a
67% chance
that you miss the dis(re)-appearance of the star. So it's better to
have, say, a 4 sec integration, so you have 67% chance to get
the
occultation in one of your exposures.