We are excited to announce the launch of our new forums! You can access it forums.aavso.org. For questions, please see our blog post. The forums at aavso.org/forum have become read-only.
Announcement: New Applications
We are excited to announce the launch of our new applications! We're opening up early access to our new applications for searching, downloading, and submitting photometric observations. You can now access these applications through these links:
We ask for your feedback in order to help us improve these applications. Please send feedback for the applications above to feedback@aavso.org. Note: please avoid duplicating submissions across the two submit applications.
If you are lucky, your target star is actually also in the database of observations done by AAVSO observers. This will be linked from the VSX page mentioned by Stella, but you can also just type in the name of the variable star in the input field on the AAVSO home page (right hand side, "Pick a Star") and click on one of the links below that to see whether there are recent observations of the star in the DB, or to plot a light curve (if there are indeed observations), or to go to said VSX lookup page for that star. Try alternative names for the star if you first cannot find anything. If it's one of the more well known variable stars, you can be almost sure to find observations this way.
If there are indeed a lot of observations, you might want to download the data in some machine-readable form for your research. There are several ways to do this, one very useful tool is VStar, look on the homepage under the "Menu" Data->Data Analysis -> VStar.
Hello,
You can get information on variable stars (including their magnitude range) on VSX, under: https://www.aavso.org/vsx/
Best wishes - clear skies,
Stella.
If you are lucky, your target star is actually also in the database of observations done by AAVSO observers. This will be linked from the VSX page mentioned by Stella, but you can also just type in the name of the variable star in the input field on the AAVSO home page (right hand side, "Pick a Star") and click on one of the links below that to see whether there are recent observations of the star in the DB, or to plot a light curve (if there are indeed observations), or to go to said VSX lookup page for that star. Try alternative names for the star if you first cannot find anything. If it's one of the more well known variable stars, you can be almost sure to find observations this way.
If there are indeed a lot of observations, you might want to download the data in some machine-readable form for your research. There are several ways to do this, one very useful tool is VStar, look on the homepage under the "Menu" Data->Data Analysis -> VStar.
Found something?
CS
HBE