› Forums › Variable Stars › Preparing for the eruption of T CrB
Tagged: T CrB recurrent nova CV
- This topic has 49 replies, 15 voices, and was last updated 2 weeks ago by Steve Brown.
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5 April 2024 at 3:27 pm #622420Stewart John BeanParticipant
I have tried to answer my own question without particular success. Certainly gamma ray bursts (GRB) are detected about once per day by satellites. Close supernovae may have caused extinction events and ground based radio astronomy may have a chance. I think it is possible that at a dark site and with a whole sky detector sensitive to green light (from excited N2) you may detect something. I am not going out in a deck chair waiting for a few seconds flash!
The largest GRB so far was GRB 221009A ( on 2022 October 9) which was associated with a supernovae 2 billion light years away. . Search “A Significant Sudden Ionospheric Disturbance Associated with Gamma-Ray Burst GRB 221009A” . https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2515-5172/ac9d2f/meta
The event was detected with a very low frequency radio SuperSID monitor.Are the radio section aware?
Now a recurrent nova is not a supernovae and the radiation is not focussed in our direction, but it is a million times closer so who knows.
Stewart
10 April 2024 at 1:21 am #622482Bill WardParticipantHi,
I was testing out the camera I’ll be using in my next meteor camera system and thought it would be a good idea to check what’s going on with T CrB.
This is a single 5 second unguided exposure, binned 2×2, cropped, linear stretch and re-sized. Taken 2024 04 09 23 46 58 BST. I found a finder chart on line but I’m not 100% sure if T CrB is bright enough to be visible.
I’ve circled what I think might be T CrB. The brightest star is Epsilon CrB for orientation. Does anyone have an image with T CrB in it to compare?
cheers,
Bill.Attachments:
10 April 2024 at 1:49 am #622484Bill WardParticipantHow does one edit messages?
Bill.10 April 2024 at 7:25 am #622485AlanMParticipantBill,
Uploading your image to Astronomy.Net confirms your marking.
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10 April 2024 at 2:06 pm #622488Robin LeadbeaterParticipantHere it is in a 1 sec exposure with my finder last night. (Fuzzy with this unfiltered fast achromat due to the high flux in the IR)
Cheers
RobinAttachments:
10 April 2024 at 2:43 pm #622490Bill WardParticipantHi Alan/Robin,
Thanks for the check/comparison shot.
Quite fascinating!
Cheers,
Bill.15 April 2024 at 11:24 am #622518Maxim UsatovParticipantInteresting activity tonight.
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15 April 2024 at 5:18 pm #622525Jeremy ShearsParticipantNice work Max!
15 April 2024 at 8:20 pm #622527Paul G. AbelParticipantPleased to report that T CrB is now accessible from my observatory! I shall be keeping a close watch of this star.
16 April 2024 at 6:39 pm #622535Steve BrownParticipantI took a DSLR shot of T CrB on 13 April 2024, to enable me to compare it to a subsequent eruption image (hopefully). I’ve posted it here and in the Gallery.
Steve
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