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Variable Star Observations: Past, Present and Future

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Title: Variable Star Observations: Past, Present and Future


1
Variable Star Observations Past, Present and
Future
  • Arne Henden
  • Director, AAVSO
  • arne_at_aavso.org

2
American Association of Variable Star Observers
  • Founded in 1911
  • 3000 total observers in 60 countries
  • One million observations received yearly
  • 15 million total, on-line, observations
  • We provide tutorials, mentoring, workshops,
    connection with professionals, campaigns, etc.
  • Website http//www.aavso.org

3
AAVSO Headquarters are in Cambridge, MA
USA (about 2km from Harvard College Observatory)
4
Mission of AAVSO
  • Observe and analyze variable stars
  • Collect and archive observations for worldwide
    access
  • Forge strong Pro-am ties and mentoring
  • Promote international collaborations
  • Perform educational outreach to the general
    public about variable stars

5
Typical Visual Observer Albert Jones, NZ 32cm
reflector he built in 1948 He has 500,000
lifetime observations
6
Non-typical Observer E.O. Smiths private
Calypso Observatory, a 1.2m scope at Kitt Peak.
He does high-resolution Stellar imaging
7
You dont always need fancy personal
equipment Esteve Duran Observatory, a public
observatory In Spain. 60cm telescope and CCD,
studying variable stars
8
Not all professional telescopes are huge the
Stare telescope on Tenerife a 12cm aperture with
CCD for exoplanet studies
9
The line between amateurs and professionals is
blurring due to high-quality commercial telescopes
10
and because of high-quality, inexpensive
commercial cameras
11
Variable Stars
  • Stars that change in brightness
  • Sometimes cyclical sometimes chaotic, sometimes
    just an outburst (or even an explosion,
    destroying the star!)
  • About two percent of all stars show some easily
    discernable change in brightness, including our
    Sun

12
RR Lyr variables in M3 Stanek/CfA
13
How Amateurs are contributing to Variable-Star
Studies
  • Obtaining light curves and analyzing eclipsing
    binaries and pulsating stars
  • Observing cataclysmic variables in quiescence and
    outburst
  • Long-term monitoring of Mira variables
  • Finding unusual objects - gamma-ray bursts,
    microlensing stars, exoplanets
  • datamining

14
How YOU can contribute
  • Studying variable stars is one of the few places
    where amateurs can contribute valuable data
  • Visual, PEP, CCD - any observational method works
  • Main requirement is to make the observations in a
    scientific manner (training and proper tools)
  • You can participate at any level - data
    collection, analysis, research support

15
Visual Observing
  • Naked eye, binoculars, telescope
  • Estimate brightness with respect to other stars
    in field
  • AAVSO provides charts and photometric sequences
    (stars over wide range in magnitude)
  • Find stars brighter than and fainter than
    variable, interpolate

16
Value and Limitations
  • Easy to do, cheap, little skill involved
  • Typical errors with experience are about 0.2mags.
    Some observers can do 0.1mag or better. Since
    errors random, win when many observers contribute
  • Mistakes (wrong identification) difficult to
    trace. Discoveries require confirmation.
  • Good for detecting outbursts (CVs) and for stars
    with wide magnitude range (Miras/LPVs)
  • Accepted method for long-term monitoring of stars

17
Mira Variables
R And, P 409.33 d
Long-period variables can be some of the
prettiest stars to observe
Typical AAVSO finding chart
18
You can observe single pulsation cycles
V Hya
or follow decades-long trends
19
SS Cyg, a typical cataclysmic variable light
curve from 1896 to 2004
20
Helping astronomers trigger satellite observations
21
Projects
  • Adopt one of the 380 Miras that have long term
    light curves, and continue the tradition into the
    future
  • Participate in one of the AAVSO campaigns on CVs,
    watching for outbursts (upcoming HST obs of SDSS
    CVs)

22
Project V5558 Sgr
23
PEP Observations
  • Simple, inexpensive method of precision
    photometry
  • Looks at one star at a time
  • Requires photometric skies
  • Cant go as faint as CCD observing
  • Little computer expertise necessary

24
SSP-3
25
(No Transcript)
26
Projects
  • Participate in the P Cygni campaign, watching for
    flickering that matches spectroscopic variations
    outbursts
  • Participate in the TU Cas campaign
  • Next Fall eclipsing systems in Orion zet Aur

27
DSLR cameras - 1
  • Can use your digital camera (Canon, Nikon) for
    exposures up to 30sec or so
  • Precision about 0.1mag, but 3 simultaneous colors
  • Can go fainter than visual, permanent record
  • Can use the camera for daytime activities

28
DSLR cameras - 2
  • IR blocker so cant go red
  • Monochrome resolution weird (Bayer pattern)
  • Can also use color CCD cameras such as DSI-color
    (cheap, but only for astrophotography and not
    vacation photos!)

29
DSLR Projects
  • Monitoring CVs for outburst
  • Monitoring CVs in outburst in multiple passbands
  • Monitoring RR Lyr, high-amp delta Sct with
    multiple passbands
  • Survey (nova searches)

30
CCD Observing
  • High precision, very faint, crowded fields,
    multifilter, etc.
  • Different price levels (500-50000). Cheaper
    systems usually smaller format, less features
  • Requires computer, software, calibration images
    and image processing

31
Observations of HD126080 with 6cm telescope and
CCD Gomez-Forrellad Garcia-Melendo 1997
3 year period eclipse was a month long Terrell
et al. 2003
32
Eclipsing Cepheid
Antipin et al. 0705.0605
33
AU Peg
PopI/II Cepheid P2.4days, sinusoidal Binary, 53d
period Changing period DMC?
34
AU Peg - 2
35
Obtaining light curves of microlensing candidates
Credit J. Skowron
Planet Mass 13 ME
Note amateurs discovered closest microlensed
star (Casseopeia) November 2006 8th magnitude at
peak
Credit NASA
36
Transit of mercury - like an exoplanet transit,
it blocks part of the light from our Sun during
its passage across the disk of the Sun
37
Two exoplanet transits (much bigger than Jupiter)
38
Future
  • Surveys, Surveys, Surveys
  • More and better equipment and software
  • Spectroscopy
  • Datamining
  • Robotic telescopes

39
The XO Project 2x10cm telephoto Lenses with
CCD At Maui, Hawaii. Exoplanet studies
40
ASAS
200mm camera lens V-band, nightly Chile, so
southern hemisphere up to 20 Northern
hemisphere system on Maui, not publically
available yet
41
PanStarrs
1.8m telescope 1Gpix camera Entire sky visible
from Hawaii every week or so
42
Sonoita Research Observatory (SRO)
  • Operated by John Gross partners Dirk Terrell,
    Walt Cooney and AAVSO
  • C14, Paramount, STL-1001E

43
Spectroscopy
44
V1280 Sco
45
Volunteer work is important, too
  • Database (MySQL) programming to give researchers
    access to 200K CCD images, photometry, etc.
  • Working on the AAS Pro-Am web page
  • Digitization of scans of the 75K Olin Eggen
    observation cards

46
Typical Eggen card
47
How YOU can get informed
  • http//www.aavso.org has manuals, campaigns,
    tutors, maillists
  • http//cba.phys.columbia.edu for CVs also CVNET
  • http//www.socastrosci.org for CCDs and
    spectroscopy
  • RASC, BAA, other organizations have variable-star
    sections and groups
  • John Percys new variable star book
  • Buils spectroscopy web site http//www.astrosurf
    .com/buil/
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