[Message Prev][Message Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Message Index][Thread Index]

[vsnet-chat 6132] What the acronym of a star name means?



MISAO Project Announce Mail (March 11, 2003)

Hello. I am Seiichi Yoshida working on the MISAO project.

When looking our pictures, sometimes we come to find a very red star,
or a variable star.

When guiding the telescope towards a comet or a galaxy, sometimes we
come to find a star not drawn on a chart, or cannot find a star drawn
on a chart.

If you search about such a "special" star, you sometimes find that the
star has various names.

In the case of the MISAO Project, we have a star database containing 
about 1.5 million remarkable objects, variable stars, clusters and
nebulae, infrared or ultraviolet stars, emission stars, large proper
motion stars, etc. So we can easily search about such a "special"
star. 

For example, let's suppose that we find a variable star at
R.A. 07h27m04s.6, Decl. -09o09'09".

After searching the star database of the MISAO Project, we found that
the star has the following five names.

= IRAS 07246-0903
= MSX5C G225.1540+03.6430
= CGCS 1720
= CGCS J0727-0909
= ISV 0724-09

Well, what do those names mean?

Basically, the thing a star has various names implies that the star
has been researched and observed in various view points.

The acronyms of star names often means the research contents,
researchers' names, or paper titles. So we can suppose what kind of
star it is only based on the name.

But when the star has a name we have never seen, what can we do? In
this example case, what do the acronyms "CGCS" or "ISV" mean?

In order to investigate the meanings of acronyms or find literatures
on the acronyms, the following web page is convenient.

  Dictionary of Nomenclature of Celestial Objects
  http://vizier.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/Dic

For example, please input the "CGCS" and search. Then you can see it
stands for "Cool Galactic Carbon Stars". So we can see the star is a
carbon star.

In the same way, the acronyms "IRAS" and "MSX5C" mean that the star
was observed in infrared, that is, the star is a red star.

Therefore, the star in this example case seems a red variable like
Mira.

However, there are many unofficial acronyms in the world. We cannot
search for those unofficial acronyms using this web page. In this
example case, this web page outputs nothing for the acronym "ISV".

In fact, we cannot search for the acronym "MisV", assigned to the
MISAO Project new variable stars, using this web page.

Especially, many new variable stars have been discovered, and many new
acronyms have been created on and on these days. In this March, Ondrej
Pejcha has started to report new variable stars using a new acronym
"Pej".

Therefore, I listed up all acronyms in the star database of the MISAO
Project, and created a web page which shows the original names,
literatures, data resources, etc., for all those acronyms.

  Supported Catalogues
  http://vsnet.aerith.net/misao/pixy/catalog.html

Looking this web page, we can see the acronym "ISV" stands for "Iida
Suspected Variables". That is, the star in this example case has been
already discovered as a variable star by Japanese amateur Iida.

Many stars with unofficial acronyms like "ISV" are included in
"newvar.cat", compiled by Taichi Kato.

When a new variable star is posted to vsnet-newvar, Seiichi Yoshida
gets the data, changes the format and send it to Kato to be added to
"newvar.cat". The recent new variable stars reported by Klaus
Bernhard, Katsumi Haseda, John Greaves have been added to "newvar.cat"
in this way.

In recent years, Brian Skiff has been working on a research to revise
the positions of stars in old catalogs. The results have been posted
to vsnet-id. Those data have been added to "newvar.cat" in this way,
too.

If you search about a "special" star, the following web page is also
convenient. 

  SIMBAD: Query by identifier, coordinates or reference code
  http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/sim-fid.pl

Please input R.A. and Decl., then you can search various names of the
star at the position. However, you cannot search for recent new
variable stars discovered by amateurs.

So I recommend you also search "newvar.cat". And if you find a name
you have never seen, please see the table in the following page.

  Supported Catalogues
  http://vsnet.aerith.net/misao/pixy/catalog.html

P.S.
The past MISAO project announce mails are available at:
  http://vsnet.aerith.net/misao/

--
Seiichi Yoshida
comet@aerith.net
http://vsnet.aerith.net/


Return to Home Page

Return to the Powerful Daisaku Nogami

vsnet-adm@kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp

Powered by ooruri technology