Observations for the 2023 season can be found
at
ts14
_______________________________________________________________________
We're
in the dip depth
region of <
0.5 % which is
typical for this
observing
season. OOT
levels (with
which all short
timescale dips
are referred) continue
to be rare. In
other words,
"clearings" are
rare because the
inner ring of
dust clouds is
spread out in
azimuth (due to
Keplerian
shear).
Clearings were
common during
the early Kepler
observations
(2009 to 2011)
but have become
rarer since the
big and
infrequent dips
of 2012 (one big
dip) and 2013 (2
big dips).
The HAO 2022
observations
have established
that KIC846
continues the
trend of
evermore dips
(secondary
collisions), all
shallow (lower
energy per
collision), each
lasting many
days (due to
Keplerian
shear), with
very little time
at the OOT
level. This is
consistent with
a collision
model that
started with a
"bang" 11 years
ago, when Kepler
was observing.
It's possible
for another big
collision, but
unlikely,
considering how
inactive things
were before the
big collision.
That suggests
that the
interval between
big collisions
is many decades,
and maybe
several
centuries. We
were lucky that
KIC846 gave us a
good show for
our generation.
I think it's a
good time
for me to take
another break
in observing;
I'll add
measurements
at infrequent
intervals. As time permits, I'll continue
adding
material to
the "Overview
of Past 16
Years" section
of this web
page, which
describes the
collision
model I have
in mind.
_______________________________________________________________________
Links
on this web page
Basic info for
KIC846
Recent Behavior
List of observing sessions (for
the 2022 observing season)
Overview of Past 16
Years
Finder image (showing my ref
stars)
References
Links on other web pages
HAO
precision explained (580 ppm)
DASCH
comment
This is
the 13th web page devoted to my observations of
Tabby's Star for the date interval 2022.05.13 to
the present.
Go back to 12th
of 13 web pages (for dates 2021.10.22 to
2022.01.04)
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13 web pages (for dates 2021.04.25 to
2021.10.21)
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13 web pages (for dates 2020.09.27 to
2020.12.20)
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web pages (for dates 2019.01.20 to
2020.01.11)
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web pages (for dates 2018.10.10 to 2019.01.19)
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web pages (for dates 2018.02.25 to 2018.08.01)
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Go back to 1st
of 13 web pages (for dates 2014.05.02 to
2017.06.17)
Reference
Star Quality Assessment (the 10 best stars out of
25 evaluated)
Basic Info for KIC846
RA/DE = 20:06:15.44 +44:27:24.9
V-mag = 11.85, g'-mag =12.046, B-V = +0.51 (APASS)
Spectral type: F3V
T_eff = 6750 K
R = 1.58 R_sun (1.10e+6 km)
M = 1.43 M_sun (2.84e+30 Kg)
Observing season centered on Jul 24
Recent
Behavior
Figure 1. The southern Arizona monsoon was
persistent this year (late June and late August), so very
few measurements were possible then. .
Figure 2. HAO observations during the past
year.
Figure 3. HAO observations during the past 3
years. Notice the variations of OOT level
(dashed lines). OOT at g' band varies more than at
longer wavelengths. This is to be expected since small
particles affect shorter wavelengths more. Presumably, the
OOT variations are due to a more spread-out band (outer
orbit, with fewer collisions). The dips would then be due to
recently created dust clouds in a different orbit (inner),
where collisions are more frequent. Whereas the dust
clouds that produce dips last only a few weeks, and don't
experience significant Keplerian orbit shear, the dust
clouds in the outer orbit last months to years (due to less
radiation pressure), and undergo significant Keplerian orbit
shear. We don't know if the outer and inner orbits are
circular (I envision the inner orbit to be circular and the
outer orbit to be highly elliptical, as shown at link).