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Photographic Observation of Stellar Occultations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

A. Tomić
Affiliation:
Narodna Opservatorija, Kalemegdan, 11000 Beograd, Yugoslavia
N. Čabrić
Affiliation:
Narodna Opservatorija, Kalemegdan, 11000 Beograd, Yugoslavia
V. Čelebonović
Affiliation:
Institute of Physics, POB 57, 11001 Beograd, Yugoslavia

Extract

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Stellar occultations are usually observed visually, but this can also be done photographically. Our method has some advantages:

  1. the obtained moments of contacts refer to the smoothed lunar limb,

  2. the error in the determination of contacts is calculable,

  3. the error may be less than in visual work,

  4. the reduction of photographs is fast, due to the application of an “on-line” computer [1].

In order to achieve all this, it is necessary to make a series of photographs of the Moon and the object being occulted before the first and after the last contact. This is a crucial step in our method, because the photographs must be of high quality. This demands two things:

  1. the images of the occulted object and the Moon must be reliably recorded and

  2. the illuminated limb of the Moon must give optimal darkening on the film.

Type
Part III Observations and Results
Copyright
Copyright © Springer-Verlag 1988

References

1. Čabrić, N., Tomić, A. and Čelebonović, V., 1985, Publ. Obs. Astron. Belgrade, 33, 75.Google Scholar
2. Tomić, A., 1983, Astrophotography, Astron. Soc. of the University, Sarajevo, Yugoslavia (in Serbo-croat).Google Scholar