[vsnet-alert 24501] ASASSN-20jl - strange 12.8m object in Hercules
Denis Denisenko d.v.denisenko@gmail.com via vsnet-alert
vsnet-alert at ooruri.kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp
Sat Aug 1 04:25:00 JST 2020
ASAS-SN (Shappee et al., 2014; Kochanek et al., 2017) has reported a
bright, low-amplitude transient in Hercules on July 31:
ASASSN-20jl
20200729.2489 15.010g ASAS-SN
20200729.2502 15.050g ASAS-SN
20200729.2515 15.075g ASAS-SN
20200731.2993 12.844g ASAS-SN
20200731.3006 12.827g ASAS-SN
20200731.3019 12.849g ASAS-SN
ASAS-SN light curve for the last 100 days:
https://asas-sn.osu.edu/light_curves/b149e6ec-6b17-4d74-9f57-cb5d070d9ffb
Gaia DR2 position: 16 46 14.67 +17 00 17.5
Plx=1.16(3) mas, pmRA=9.47(3) mas/yr, pmDE=-11.09(3) mas/yr.
Color-combined DSS finder chart:
http://scan.sai.msu.ru/~denis/ASASSN-20lj-BRIR.jpg
IDs from other catalogs:
2MASS J16461467+1700175
GSC 01524-01167
NSVS 10719460
SDSS J164614.67+170017.4
USNO-A2.0 1050-08124731
USNO-B1.0 1070-0305017
WISE J164614.68+170017.4
The star of a kind that shouldn't go into outburst. Neither blue, nor
particularly red object. No UV excess (V=14.7, NUV=20.8). Gaia absolute
magnitude M=+4.9, effective temperature 5592+/-54 K (Bai et al., 2019) -
pretty Sun-like. No sign of the past variability in CRTS, NSVS, ASAS,
DASCH, ZTF data or on the NEAT images. APASS magnitudes are
V=14.716+/-0.016, B=15.431+/-0.083. No asteroids or minor planets at this
position in MPChecker.
Confirmation from Europe or South Africa is required.
Denis Denisenko
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