Quote:
Originally Posted by Shark Bait
Thanks again Jon. I was a little concerned that my best efforts to visually pin down Nova Cen 2013's magnitude were still different to the figures you were all getting.
To be honest, sending my visual estimates to the AAVSO did not occur to me. I am surprised that visual is considered a valid measurement when photometry and spectroscopy can remove the subjective element of the data collection. I will follow up on the link that you provided and will consider sending my observations.
Regards,
Stu.
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Stu, is it weren't for the visual observers, we wouldn't even have a light curve for this thing! For the record, the last visual record uploaded, a few hours ago from South Africa, was by Peter Wedepohl, an experienced observer with over 2000 logged observations going back to 1998. He had it at 4.1, same as you :-)
Photometry is not as an exact science as it may seem. My last measurements in the same session spanned 4.18-4.27, and each of these was a stack of 5 exposures. The problem is that the object is so bright. I'm having to take no more than 5s subs through my little 80mm guidescope - using my main scope would saturate the star in an exposure of less than a second. Even with the guidescope, I can only take 5s exposures, which mean that seeing, scintillation and even the camera shutter can all distort the recorded brightness, and that the signal to noise ratio is low.
Second, photometry works by comparing the measured target's pixel intensity with that of comparison stars of known magnitude, ideally similar magnitude (and colour!) to the target and in the same field. For this object we have to use two 7th magnitude comp stars, which is stretching the capability of the method to be really accurate - I have to make sure the nova doesn't saturate or get close to the non-linear response threshold of my camera, but that means the comp stars are faint, subject to scintillation, and have barely-acceptable SNR.
I hope that makes sense! The short version is - for an object this bright, frequent visual observations are invaluable and can close to photometry in accuracy if done well.
Now, when it fades to mag 12, that will be another story ;-)