333 research outputs found
Monitoring All Sky for Variability
A few percent of all stars are variable, yet over 90% of variables brighter
than 12 magnitude have not been discovered yet. There is a need for an all sky
search and for the early detection of any unexpected events: optical flashes
from gamma-ray bursts, novae, dwarf novae, supernovae, `killer asteroids'. The
ongoing projects like ROTSE, ASAS, TASS, and others, using instruments with
just 4 inch aperture, have already discovered thousands of new variable stars,
a flash from an explosion at a cosmological distance, and the first partial
eclipse of a nearby star by its Jupiter like planet. About one million
variables may be discovered with such small instruments, and many more with
larger telescopes. The critical elements are software and full automation of
the hardware. A complete census of the brightest eclipsing binaries is needed
to select objects for a robust empirical calibration of the the accurate
distance determination to the Magellanic Clouds, the first step towards the
Hubble constant. An archive to be generated by a large number of small
instruments will be very valuable for data mining projects. The real time
alerts will provide great targets of opportunity for the follow-up observations
with the largest telescopes.Comment: 6 pages, latex, minor changes, published in the Publications of the
Astronomical Society of the Pacific as one of Millennium Essays: 2000, PASP,
112, 1281-128
Astronomy with Small Telescopes
The All Sky Automated Survey (ASAS) is monitoring all sky to about 14 mag
with a cadence of about 1 day; it has discovered about 10^5 variable stars,
most of them new. The instrument used for the survey had aperture of 7 cm. A
search for planetary transits has lead to the discovery of about a dozen
confirmed planets, so called 'hot Jupiters', providing the information of
planetary masses and radii. Most discoveries were done with telescopes with
aperture of 10 cm.
We propose a search for optical transients covering all sky with a cadence of
10 - 30 minutes and the limit of 12 - 14 mag, with an instant verification of
all candidate events. The search will be made with a large number of 10 cm
instruments, and the verification will be done with 30 cm instruments.
We also propose a system to be located at the L_1 point of the Earth - Sun
system to detect 'killer asteroids'. With a limiting magnitude of about 18 mag
it could detect 10 m boulders several hours prior to their impact, provide
warning against Tunguska-like events, as well as to provide news about
spectacular but harmless more modest impacts.Comment: 11 pages, accepted to PASP minor changes to the tex
Contact Binary Variables as X-ray Sources
We present cross-identification of archived X-ray point sources with W UMa
variable stars found in the All-Sky Automated Survey (ASAS). In a surveyed sky
area of 300 square degrees of ASAS, 36 W UMa stars have been found associated
with X-ray emission. We compute the distances of these W UMa systems and hence
their X-ray luminosities. Our data support the "supersaturation" phenomenon
seen in these fast rotators, namely that the faster a W UMa star rotates, the
weaker its X-ray luminosity.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 1 table; submitted to A
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