Hi Josch,

The ASAS-SN identifier was added today, the star was not an ASAS-SN discovery so until now you had to use any of the other names to find it.
Coordinate searches are always better in order to find objects and see what their primary names are.

Cheers,
Sebastian


Hi Sebastian,

under which name? ASASSN-25bt is not found by WEBOBS.

Regards,

Josch

On 20.05.2025 16:17, Sebastián Otero wrote:
Hi Josch,

it was added to VSX on May 14.

Cheers,
Sebastian

I have observed this target the past nights. It's not yet in the VSX. Will send the data to you later today.
Regards Josch


-----Originele bericht-----
Van: Yusuke<tampo@kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp>
naar: vsnet-outburst<vsnet-outburst@ooruri.kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp>; vsnet-campaign-dn<vsnet-campaign-dn@ooruri.kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp>; vsnet-alert<vsnet-alert@ooruri.kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp>
datum: dinsdag 20 mei 2025 10:04 CEST
Onderwerp: [vsnet-alert 28062] ZTF18acynctq = TCP J20402089+4915562 = ASASSN-25bt: new SU UMa star candidate


ZTF18acynctq = TCP J20402089+4915562 = ASASSN-25bt: new SU UMa star
candidate

XOSS team via TOCP/TNS and ASAS-SN reported the 2025 outburst of this
system, which is already known as ZTF18acynctq in its 2018 outburst.
https://alerce.online/object/ZTF18acynctq
http://www.cbat.eps.harvard.edu/unconf/followups/J20402089+4915562.html
https://www.aavso.org/vsx/index.php?view=detail.top&oid=10848612

Its 2018 outburst lasted for ~15 days and showed a possible
rebrightening in the ATLAS data. Thus the outburst cycle is ~2300 d.
This system is currently ~16.0 mag, and time-resolved observations may
detect superhumps.

Best regards,
Yusuke



-- 
Sebastián Otero
VSX Team
American Association of Variable Star Observers

185 Alewife Brook Pkwy Ste 410
Cambridge, MA  02138-1104
www.aavso.org

------------------------

The mission of the AAVSO is to enable anyone, anywhere, to participate in scientific discovery through variable star astronomy.


-- 
Sebastián Otero
VSX Team
American Association of Variable Star Observers

185 Alewife Brook Pkwy Ste 410
Cambridge, MA  02138-1104
www.aavso.org

------------------------

The mission of the AAVSO is to enable anyone, anywhere, to participate in scientific discovery through variable star astronomy.