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Discovery and Measurement of Double Stars by Lunar Occultations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 July 2018
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When a star is occulted by the dark limb of the Moon its apparent intensity drops to zero very quickly. MacMahon (1909) proposed that the time of disappearance would measure the diameter of the star, but Eddington (1909) demonstrated that diffraction effects at the lunar limb would lengthen the apparent time of disappearance to about 20 msec, and suggested that these effects would greatly limit the usefulness of the technique.
- Type
- First Session
- Information
- International Astronomical Union Colloquium , Volume 5: Coordination of Observing Techniques of Visual Double Stars , April 1971 , pp. 28 - 37
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1971
References
Evans, D. S., Heydenrych, J. C. R., and J. D. N., Van Wyk: 1954, Monthly Notices Roy. Astron. Soc.
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