[vsnet-alert 11606] New CV in Taurus aka CSS091024:050124+203818
Denis Denisenko
denis at hea.iki.rssi.ru
Tue Oct 27 01:17:10 JST 2009
On Saturday (Oct. 24) Catalina Real-Time Transient Survey has discovered
an outburst of the cataclysmic variable in Taurus which we together with
Kirill Sokolovsky have independently identified on Oct. 13 from
USNO-B1.0 catalogue and DSS plates in the vicinity of the faint ROSAT
source 1RXS J050121.3+203731 (flux 0.027 cnts/s, hardness ratios
0.42+/-0.36 and 0.33+/-0.39). The designation and coordinates of the
variable are:
USNO-B1.0 1106-0062881
05 01 24.11 +20 38 18.1 pmRA=10 pmDE=-8 B1=19.13 R1=18.18 B2=18.71
R2=15.80 I=17.51
Note R1-R2=2.38 - that's how it was discovered (we have two more real
variables found so far among tons of atrefacts in USNO-B catalogue, and
the identification work is in progress). The star was in outburst on
the DSS Red plate of 1986-10-30 and the photovisual plate of 1982-12-16
(hense the V=15.58 magnitude in GSC 2.3). One more outburst was
detected by NEAT in January 2004 (on the poor quality images).
I have been monitoring this variable with the Bradford Robotic Telescope
since our discovery. Three images were obtained so far - on Oct. 17, 22
and 25. Photometry follows:
YYYYMMDD(UT) mag observer
20091017.189 191R (Bradford Robotic Telescope) #Job 91284
20091022.177 180R (Bradford Robotic Telescope) #Job 91968
20091025.172 181R (Bradford Robotic Telescope) #Job 92414
Color-combined finder chart is available here:
http://hea.iki.rssi.ru/~denis/J0501+2038-comps.gif (IR, R and O DSS
plates used as RGB channels; USNO-A2.0 Red and Blue magnitudes of
several nearby stars shown). I was using R=13.1, B=13.1 as a comparison
star.
Catalina has detected an outburst to 16.32-16.45 mag on Oct. 24.44-24.56
UT - right between my second and third BRT observations! Images and
light curve of CSS091024:050124+203818 are available at the following page:
http://nesssi.cacr.caltech.edu/catalina/20091024/910241210264127621.html
There are at least 4 previous outbursts in CRTS data:
20050201.480 148 (CRTS, Drake et al. 2009, ApJ, 696, 870)
20051227.520 148 (CRTS)
20070313.480 155 (CRTS)
20080219.520 155 (CRTS)
Catalina data also confirm that the object has quickly faded after the
2009, Oct. 24 outburst:
20091024.440 163 (CRTS)
20091024.560 164 (CRTS)
20091026.440 178 (CRTS)
20091026.520 178 (CRTS)
Variable is located 48" away from the X-ray source 1RXS J050121.3+203731
with the catalogue error radius of 23". This source is mentioned in the
article "Radio-loud AGN in the northern ROSAT All-Sky Survey II.
Multi-frequency properties of unidentified sources" by Brinkmann et al.,
1997 as being located 29" from the radio source NVSS J050120+203812
coinciding with the galaxy 45" West of the variable. It is likely that
the X-ray source detected by ROSAT is a combination of fluxes from the
galaxy and CV itself.
Follow-up monitoring of this CV is encouraged. Outbursts appear to be
very short-lived, so this is likely not an UGSU-type variable, but the
member of a less-studied subclass of dwarf novae.
Denis in Moscow
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