ES Dra appears to be coming out of a long standstill
Announcement: New Forums
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.
ES Dra appears to be coming out of a long standstill
You may be right, Jim. It might be too early to call it that, but we'll see.
Since 2010 ES Dra has spent almost as much time in standstill (around 15.2) as it has in the dwarf nova outburst cycle. Coverage has been very good.
There is dense enough coverage to show that it didn't drop to quiescence before going into outburst either, if this indeed turns out to be an outburst. We've never seen that before in ES Dra, so this would be an interesting find. 9 of the 22 known Z Cams exhibit this behavior, so it turned out to be not so uncommon. Your data might add another one to the list.
ES Dra was only recently classified as UGZ in The orbital period and variability of the dwarf nova ES Draconis, Ringwald F.A. and Velasco K.,2012NewA...17..108R
The classification was based on AAVSO data, as stated in the abstract - " The long-term light curve of ES Dra compiled by the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO) shows that ES Dra is a Z Cam star, which between 1995 and 2009 spent most of its time in standstill."
So if you ever wonder are astronomers and citizen scientists actually using your data in their research, the answer is an emphatic yes. Keep up the good work!
Since reporting this "mini-outbreak" I had one other similar observation but I noticed in the LCG that other observers did not get the same results. I checked my images and can find nothing wrong with them (so please don't start emailing me!). I certainly check to see why my data may look different than others, but I never change my data based on other's results unless I am really dubious of my image. Not the case here, so the poor researcher will have to make the call.
BTW, my last two results are back down into the (recent) "normal" range (ie, still in standstill).
You may be right, Jim. It might be too early to call it that, but we'll see.
Since 2010 ES Dra has spent almost as much time in standstill (around 15.2) as it has in the dwarf nova outburst cycle. Coverage has been very good.
There is dense enough coverage to show that it didn't drop to quiescence before going into outburst either, if this indeed turns out to be an outburst. We've never seen that before in ES Dra, so this would be an interesting find. 9 of the 22 known Z Cams exhibit this behavior, so it turned out to be not so uncommon. Your data might add another one to the list.
ES Dra was only recently classified as UGZ in The orbital period and variability of the dwarf nova ES Draconis, Ringwald F.A. and Velasco K., 2012NewA...17..108R
The classification was based on AAVSO data, as stated in the abstract - " The long-term light curve of ES Dra compiled by the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO) shows that ES Dra is a Z Cam star, which between 1995 and 2009 spent most of its time in standstill."
So if you ever wonder are astronomers and citizen scientists actually using your data in their research, the answer is an emphatic yes. Keep up the good work!
[quote=roe]See LC for past 200 days with results from last night http://tinyurl.com/n3dukmd[/quote]
Since reporting this "mini-outbreak" I had one other similar observation but I noticed in the LCG that other observers did not get the same results. I checked my images and can find nothing wrong with them (so please don't start emailing me!). I certainly check to see why my data may look different than others, but I never change my data based on other's results unless I am really dubious of my image. Not the case here, so the poor researcher will have to make the call.
BTW, my last two results are back down into the (recent) "normal" range (ie, still in standstill).