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ASTROMETRIC UPDATE:
OCCULTATION BY (184) DEJOPEJA - 2001 DECEMBER 4

[Prediction by Edwin Goffin]

[Prediction using OCCULT software]

The prediction given by Goffin runs from the Sydney area of New South Wales across central South Australia and Western Australia to the Shark Bay area. The path given by Occult lies a little to the north from the Port Macquarie area of New South Wales across to just north of Carnarvon in Western Australia.


UPDATE: 2 DECEMBER 2001

THE UPDATED PATH

Dejopeja Update

This updated path lies around a path width to the north of that given by Goffin and a whole 2 minutes earlier. The path crosses Newcastle on the New South Wales coast around 17:27:30 UT at a relatively low altitude of 21 degrees. Running further west, the path crosses northern New South Wales and South Australia and across the central parts of Western Australia. At the coast, the path includes Carnarvon at 17:32 UT.

The error margins in this calculation certainly include all of Sydney and the Blue Mountains/Bathurst areas around 17:28 UT while Canberra is an outside chance seconds later.

Observers should note that this is a fairly faint star (magnitude = 11.8) made all the more difficult to monitor by the relatively low altitude (for eastern observers) and the presence of an 83% moon only 34 degrees distant. The target star is the faint star at the point of an elongated triangle involving TYC/GSC 1867 1166 (magnitude 10.0) just 1 minute of arc to the northwest. This star is merged with the target star in the Goffin paper printed predictions circulated by the RASNZ Occultation Section.

Calculation Source

This prediction update has been computed by Steve Kerr, Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia based on astrometry from Ron Stone of the US Naval Observatory - Flagstaff Station. The Tycho 2 position of the target star has been used.

EVENT DETAILS SUMMARY: The Occultation Path: Data for the target star: Data for the minor planet:

IMPORTANT NOTE!

Astrometric updates such as these should not be taken as definitive, but rather only as an indication of where the true track may lie relative to the original predicted track. Observers must bear in mind that later astrometry, in which the target star is measured in the same field as the asteroid, may still reveal substantial changes to the predicted track and time of the event. For this reason it is most important that observers far from the predicted track still monitor the event.

Use these links for further information:
[Planetary Occultations] [Using the Predictions]
[Observing Details] [Timing Details] [Reporting Details] [Report Form]
[Asteroid Occultation Results]


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