Skip to content
British Astronomical Association

British Astronomical Association

Supporting amateur astronomers since 1890

  • Community
    • Community
    • Observer’s Challenges
    • Tutorials
    • Dark Skies Commission
    • BAA Alerts
    • Observing Calendar
    • Forum
    • Archives
    • Affiliated Societies
    • Outreach
    • Useful Links
  • News
    • Latest News
    • BAA Business
    • Sky Notes
  • Events
    • Events
    • Future Events
    • Previous Events
  • Publications
    • Journal
    • Book Reviews
    • Documents
      • Latest Documents
    • Handbooks
    • Buy
  • Sections
    • All Sections
    • Asteroids & Remote Planets
    • Aurora & NLC
    • Comet
    • Computing
    • Dark Skies Commission
    • Deep Sky
    • Education & Outreach
    • Equipment & Techniques
    • Exoplanets
    • Historical
    • Jupiter
    • Lunar
    • Mars
    • Mercury and Venus
    • Meteor
    • Radio Astronomy
    • Saturn, Uranus & Neptune
    • Solar
    • Variable Stars
  • Videos
    • Videos
    • Meetings
    • Dark Skies
    • Deep Space
      • Deep Sky
      • Exoplanets
      • Variable Stars
    • Hardware
      • Equipment
      • Radio Astronomy
      • Robotic Exploration
    • Solar System
      • Asteroids
      • Comets
      • Jupiter
      • Mercury & Venus
      • Outer Planets
      • The Sun
    • Terrestrial
      • Aurorae
      • Historical
      • Meteors
      • The Moon
  • Observations
    • Gallery
    • Spectroscopy database
    • Photometry database
    • Comet Section Archive
    • Solar Section Archive
    • Observing Calendar
  • About Us
    • About us
    • Join
    • Contact Us
    • Grants
    • Who’s Who
    • Awards
    • Shop
    • Donate
    • Privacy Notice
    • Terms of Use
    • Dark Skies Commission
  • Login
    • Login
    • Renew membership
    • Join the BAA

sn2017gxq with ALPY600

› Forums › Spectroscopy › PSN at2017gjn in NGC1067 confirmed using ALPY 200 › sn2017gxq with ALPY600

6 October 2017 at 7:03 pm #578626
Robin Leadbeater
Participant

sn2017gxq was bright enough for the ALPY 600 last night despite the full moon. Here is the spectrum (black) overlaid on the best fit according to SNID     

https://people.lam.fr/blondin.stephane/software/snid/

which predicts it is now just past maximum.

Robin

© The British Astronomical Association 2022 Registered charity no. 210769 Registered company no. 117572 For more information including contact details, click here.

  • Home
  • About us
  • Community
  • Documents
  • Events
  • Journal
  • News
  • Sections
  • Tutorials
  • Videos
  • Forum
  • Archives
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Grants
  • Privacy Notice
  • Events
  • Who’s Who
  • BAA Alerts
  • BAA Business
  • Observer’s Challenges
  • Sky Notes
  • Terms of Use
Copyright © 2025 British Astronomical Association. All rights reserved.
Theme: ColorMag by ThemeGrill. Powered by WordPress.