It needs to be checked whether some (or all) of
the mag. 13 observations since January 9 were
made during eclipses. Can someone provide a
current ephemeris?

Regards,
Patrick
-------
Am Sonntag, 16. Januar 2022, 10:38:18 MEZ hat Patrick Schmeer via vsnet-alert <vsnet-alert@ooruri.kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp> Folgendes geschrieben:


EX Hydrae  (UG+NLDQ+E)
Intermediate polar, eclipsing, orbital period: 0.068234 d (98.257 min)

From "activity at a glance (Jan 16)" (T. Kato, vsnet-outburst 28234):
20220103.7814 133:cG  (Yutaka Maeda)
20220107.8029 130:cG  (Yutaka Maeda)
20220107.853  132  (Hiroyuki Maehara)
20220108.867  100  (Hiroyuki Maehara)
20220109.581    98  (Rod Stubbings)
20220109.7724 107cG  (Yutaka Maeda)
20220109.7724 107cG  (Yutaka Maeda)
20220111.585  128  (Rod Stubbings)
20220111.862  126  (Hiroyuki Maehara)
20220115.853  118  (Hiroyuki Maehara)

Recent ASAS-SN Sky Patrol (Shappee et al. 2014ApJ...788...48S
and Kochanek et al. 2017PASP..129j4502K) light curve and data:
https://asas-sn.osu.edu/sky-patrol/coordinate/3952b0d4-b5a1-4d54-bdda-c209b471a96b
HYAEX 20220106.3562 13.19g ASN
HYAEX 20220110.2402 11.14g ASN
HYAEX 20220111.5182 13.02g ASN
HYAEX 20220113.0232 12.75g ASN
HYAEX 20220114.0460 11.57g ASN

Precursor outburst followed by a superoutburst?
However, in this case the precursor outburst would have
been much brighter than the superoutburst.

Time-resolved photometry is urgently required.

Clear skies,
Patrick