David Dunham wrote on 31 July:
Edwin Goffin predicts 289 occultations by (37655) Illapa Earlier this month, Sergio Foglia in Italy asked Edwin Goffin to predict occultations by the 900-meter asteroid (37655) Illapa during its close approach (within 0.03 A.U.) in mid-August. Edwin has calculated 289 occultations by this object, about which he writes: "Predicting occultations of an asteroid that comes close to Earth poses a bit of a problem: - occultation durations will be very short (small diameter & fast motion) - there will be many possible occultations due to the large parallax Anyhow, I ran my occultation program and found 289 possible events for the 2 weeks from Aug. 5 till Aug 19. A plain ASCII text file at http://iota.jhuapl.edu/37655724.txt gives details, one line per event. I also created a 1.4-megabyte PDF file that you can obtain at http://iota.jhuapl.edu/37655724.pdf which shows the essential data for each event & a view of the occultation track across the Earth as seen from the asteroid (the night side of the Earth is enclosed by the thick curve). On the second text line of each view, you will find: number & name of the asteroid, predicted duration of the occultation, vis. magnitude of the star, and distance and % illumination of the moon." The current orbit could be in error by a few hundred kilometers. But Jon Giorgini at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory writes: "You probably know 37655 Illapa is scheduled for Goldstone radar August 13, 14, 15 (prior to close-aproach), then again Aug 18, 19. If the experiment proceeds as planned, the orbit will be updated as part of the radar experiment and that new orbit, covariance will be available in the publicly accessible Horizons system on the 14th (and the radar astrometry will be posted)." Then it should be possible to determine the orbit to an accuracy smaller than the asteroid. At that point, the predictions can be updated and paths accurate to about a km might be predicted (errors in the star positions will contribute an error of a few to several hundred meters). If the updated paths can be generated and distributed quickly, video observers might be able to record some of these events. Since the events will be so quick, there will be little value in such observations except for astrometry. An occultation will last only a few frames at best so that it will not be possible to improve the shape over what will be done with radar. Hopefully, updated predictions can be posted at either Steve Preston's site at http://www.asteroidoccultation.com or at the asteroidal occultation section of the main IOTA site at http://www.lunar-occultations.com/iota/asteroids/astrndx.htm . The PDF charts are numbered consecutively in the upper left corner. Of these, events of interest to North American observers are numbered 13, 21, 22, 23, 37 (all of the preceding will be before the radar orbit update), 48, 52, 54, 55 (probably before the update), 93, 94 (good, mag. 9.1, east USA), 96, 98, 101 (mag. 8.9, east USA), and 108. Some good events visible elsewhere are listed below: PDF star # Aug. mag. Area 59 14 7.4 s.e. Australia? 76 14 9.7 Red Sea, s.e. Europe 78 14 8.7 n.e. Africa, Sardinia 81 15 11.5 Africa, Iberia 82 15 10.8 n.e. Africa, Sadinia, France 93 15 9.7 s. Brazil to Yucatan 102 15 5.5 Antarctic Peninsula, Tahiti? 142 15 7.7 s. NZ, Australia (s.e & n.), Kalimantan 162 15 6.1 s. & w. Australia, Sri Lanka, s. India 211 16 7.1 Antarctica, s. Africa? 213 17 9.1 southern Africa 241 17 4.8 Indian Ocean 244 18 5.7 Indian Ocean 263 18 7.0 southern Africa 264 18 9.1 southern Africa 286 18 7.8 Antarctica (South Pole) 287 18 6.5 Antarctica (South Pole?) 288 18 7.4 s.e. Australia
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