V1454 Cyg outburst

Affiliation
Vereniging Voor Sterrenkunde, Werkgroep Veranderlijke Sterren (Belgium) (VVS)
Fri, 09/15/2017 - 10:08

Hi all,

Has someone been able to follow the outburst of V1454 Cyg? I wonder if it's a superoutburst?

Regards,

Eddy

 

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
a glimpse tonite

I barely managed to take a few V-filtered frames before clouds blocked it. I'm not sure I can get good photometry out of it (after getting some sleep), but just by looking at a few stacked frames I'd say it's between 14.7 and 15 now.

See for yourself:

 

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
V1454 Cyg

I've never observed this star before, but I'm getting a set of B & V images to average now, and will report back after analysis.

Brad Vietje, VBPA

Newbury, VT

www.nkaf.org

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
V1454 Cyg

I averaged 3 x 120 sec in V and 3x 240 sec in B in VPhot and found it at V = 14.934 and B =15.210 with 4 comps (not transformed) on 9-17-2017 at 02:42:54 (JD = 2458013.61313)  SNR only 38 in B and 54 in V, so longer exposures would be helpful for another try (17" f/6.8 telescope).

Have not reported this, as VPhot was being funky and would not allow me to designate a check star, which I need for both the AAVSO report and to report transformed measures.  Will try VPhot again in the morning, and see if I can report transformed mag's.

Clear skies,

 

Brad Vietje, VBPA

Newbury, VT

www.nkaf.org

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Detectado periodo de hums en outburtst 0.0566 d. fecha 20170916

He detectado periodo de hums de 0.0566d. durante una serie fotométrica de 2 horas en outburst de fecha 20170916.

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
15ish indeed

FWIW, I submitted a singe datapoint from my cloud-interrupted session last night, V=14.996 untransformed, +/- 0.05 as a conservative error estim.

I'm new to this type of variables, so please excuse my ignorance and correct me if I'm wrong: from present data it looks like this is a normal outburst and not a super-outburst, and one would expect this kind of event to last for perhaps a week or so?

EDIT: actually I'm confused after reading some more on  this ...can someone clarify what would make it a superoutburst? The very short period vraiations reported here would be the superhumps of a superoutburst?

CS

HB

 

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
Data Added

I was able to create the AAVSO report this AM, and have uploaded the data.  I know nothing about this star, just wanted to help with a little data for those who do.  I'll attempt to attach the report here.

Having transformed the measures, the values are a bit dimmer -- 15.002 in V and 15.174 in B.

Clear skies,

 

Brad