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The Discovery of Double Stars at Occultations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2016
Extract
When systematic photoelectric observations of occultations were started some dozen years ago it was realised that they yielded a significant crop of double star discoveries and observations. The limitations of the method were well recognised: only about ten percent of the area of the sky would ever be available and one could not choose which stars to be observed. Moreover the data obtained from a successful observation of a double star are less comprehensive than the normal visual observation. The result is the vector separation or the true separation projected along a line perpendicular to the actual lunar limb, that is the position angle of the point of occultation modified by the slope of the limb at that point.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- International Astronomical Union Colloquium , Volume 62: Current Techniques in Double and Multiple Star Research , May 1983 , pp. 63 - 72
- Copyright
- Copyright © Lowell Observatory 1983
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