1H 1933+510 outburst (Bryja) This notice is from Claia Bryja. The time has come for the next intensive VSNET campaign!! Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2000 04:03:37 -0500 From: cob585f <cob585f@mail.smsu.edu> To anyone interested: I have found the "nova-like" CV 1H 1933+510 = Cyg2 in the Downes & Shara catalogue (1987, PASP 105:127) to be more than three magnitudes high. Clouds are coming in at my location, but I have been observing it since 5.85 UT (July 23, 2000). It's now 8.5 UT, and I have taken several CCD images. Downes & Shara list this star as "nova-like" which implies it's not a dwarf nova. If this is correct the star is most likely a VY Scl star that's been spending a lot of time in the low state. However, I think it's likely a dwarf nova of some kind because of its photometric behavior. I need to confess that because of a mis-ID on a finding chart I failed to notice an earlier outburst that (luckily) I caught on the CCD frame anyway in November 1999. The mistaken identification on the earlier images was something I just discovered a month ago, but they all have the correct star visible in the field. I have observed this star in June 1999, November 1999 (outburst), and then on multiple occasions from late May 2000 to the present. Except for the November 1999 outburst, the star has stayed fainter than 17th magnitude. Because of the earlier outburst, I've been trying to observe it every chance I get to see if the outburst repeats. Well, tonight it did! It's again up at least three magnitudes, and there is no mistake about which star it is this time. I lack the equipment necessary to get good time resolution which would help settle the question of what type of CV this star is. I'm posting this in the hope that someone else can pick up the observations where I'm about to leave them off. The orbital period of this star in listed in a table in Warner's book at approximately 3.3 hours. Even if I could get good time resolution, the clouds here are doing me in. I haven't been able to observe continuously because of them and high humidity. So I hope I can pass the baton to someone else who can follow up on this. -- Claia Bryja Southwest Missouri cob585f@mail.smsu.edu W