Discovery of an Apparent Nova in M81
ATel #11029; K. Hornoch, H. Kucakova (Ondrejov), S. C. Williams (Lancaster), M. Henze (SDSU), G. Sala, J. Jose, J. Figueira, P. Sin (UPC-IEEC), H. Meusinger (TLS), M. J. Darnley (LJMU), A. Kaur, D. H. Hartmann (Clemson), A. W. Shafter (SDSU)
on 2 Dec 2017; 14:46 UT
Credential Certification: Steven Williams (scw@astro.ljmu.ac.uk)
Subjects: Optical, Nova, Transient
The M81 nova monitoring collaboration reports the discovery of an apparent nova in M81
on a co-added 3150-s unfiltered CCD frame taken on 2017 Dec. 2.127 UT with the 0.65-m
telescope at Ondrejov (OND).
The object designated PNV J09553813+6902204 is located at R.A. = 9h55m38s.13,
Decl. = +69o02'20".4 (equinox 2000.0), which is 26.6" east and 94.7" south
of the center of M81 (see link to discovery image below).
Here we list the observing dates and corresponding photometry:
Date [UT] | Mag | Err | Filter | Telescope
2017-11-11.155 | <21.3 | | C | OND
2017-11-18.115 | 21.3 | 0.3 | Hα | LT
2017-12-02.127 | 18.9 | 0.1 | C | OND
The OND 0.65-m is a reflecting telescope at the Ondrejov observatory operated jointly
by the Astronomical Institute of ASCR and the Astronomical Institute of the Charles
University of Prague, Czech Republic. It uses a Moravian Instruments G2-3200 CCD
camera (with a Kodak KAF-3200ME sensor and standard BVRI photometric filters)
mounted at the prime focus.
The unfiltered OND photometry was calibrated against R-band comparison stars from
Perelmuter & Racine (1995).
The TJO photometry is based on
the
SDSS DR7 photometry catalogue.
The LT (
Steele et al. 2004) is a fully robotic 2-m telescope operated on the island of La Palma by Liverpool John Moores University in the Spanish Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias with financial support from the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council. Our observations use the IO:O optical CCD camera of the LT. The LT photometry is based on the SDSS DR7 photometry catalogue. The Hα magnitude is defined on the AB system where mHα = 0 for fλ = 2.53 × 10-9 erg/cm2/s/Å. Through a 90 Å wide filter, this corresponds to a zero point flux of ~2.3 × 10-7 erg/cm2/s.
Discovery image