ejaavso297
New Variable Stars Discovered by the APACHE Survey. II. Results After the Second Observing Season
New Variable Stars Discovered by the APACHE Survey. II. Results After the Second Observing Season
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Photometric Analyses and Spectral Identification of the Early-Spectral Type W UMa Contact Binary V444 Andromedae
Ronald G. Samec
Faculty Research Associate, Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute, One Pari Drive, Rosman, NC 28772
Russell Robb
University of Victoria, Department of Physics and Astronomy, P.O. Box 3055, Station CSC, Victoria, BC V8W 3P6, Canada; and Guest Observer, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory
Danny R. Faulkner
Photometric Analyses and Spectral Identification of the Early-Spectral Type W UMa Contact Binary V444 Andromedae
Ronald G. Samec
Faculty Research Associate, Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute, One Pari Drive, Rosman, NC 28772
Russell Robb
The Curious Case of ASAS J174600-2321.3: an Eclipsing Symbiotic Nova in Outburst?
Stefan Hümmerich
Stiftstr. 4, Braubach, D-56338, Germany; American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO), Cambridge, MA;
Bundesdeutsche Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Veränderliche Sterne e.V. (BAV), Berlin, Germany
Recent Maxima of 67 Short Period Pulsating Stars
Gerard Samolyk
P.O. Box 20677, Greenfield, WI 53220
Received January 8, 2015; accepted January 8, 2015
Abstract
Long Term Photometric and Spectroscopic Monitoring of Semiregular Variable Stars
Robert R. Cadmus, Jr.
Department of Physics, Grinnell College, Grinnell, IA 50112
Received September 12, 2014; revised December 8, 2014; accepted December 9, 2014
Abstract
Revised Light Elements of 78 Southern Eclipsing Binary Systems
Margaret Streamer
3 Lupin Place, Murrumbateman, NSW 2582, Australia
Jeff Byron
18 Albuera Road, Epping, NSW 2121, Australia
Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Joint Meeting of the Society for Astronomical Sciences and the American Association of Variable Star Observers, Held in Ontario, California, June 12-14, 2014 |