What is this object?
- geckzilla
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What is this object?
When I do processing for Hubble objects I often use data from several years apart. I see a lot of things that move slightly, like planetary nebulas expanding and more noticeable things like puffs of gas from HH objects. Parallax causes slight movement of stars sometimes. This one moved a lot more than things I've previously noticed, though. A whole three pixels. Usually things stick to the sub-pixel movements.
Anyway, these images are from observations of NGC 2371. The hover images are both WFPC2 data and they are 12 years apart, the first being from 1995 and the second from 2007. I'm sure it's not some kind of artifact. It's also present in some raw ACS/WFC data from 2009 which I'm not sure whether it's corrected for geometric distortion but I included the image anyway with it lined up as best I could. Not a lot of movement between the 2007 and 2009 observations.
I thought it could be some kind of trans-Neptunian object but when I compared it to those I realized it moves a lot more slowly. So maybe it is just a nearby star and the movement is just parallax. I'm sure the HLA is full of hopelessly dim little oddities like this.
WFPC2 ACS/WFC
Anyway, these images are from observations of NGC 2371. The hover images are both WFPC2 data and they are 12 years apart, the first being from 1995 and the second from 2007. I'm sure it's not some kind of artifact. It's also present in some raw ACS/WFC data from 2009 which I'm not sure whether it's corrected for geometric distortion but I included the image anyway with it lined up as best I could. Not a lot of movement between the 2007 and 2009 observations.
I thought it could be some kind of trans-Neptunian object but when I compared it to those I realized it moves a lot more slowly. So maybe it is just a nearby star and the movement is just parallax. I'm sure the HLA is full of hopelessly dim little oddities like this.
WFPC2 ACS/WFC
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Re: What is this object?
One of those single wandering stars??
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- wonderboy
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Re: What is this object?
doesnt look to have moved, unless im missing something!
"I'm so fast that last night I turned off the light switch in my hotel room and was in bed before the room was dark" Muhammad Ali, faster than the speed of light?
- geckzilla
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Re: What is this object?
It's the little dot in the lower left part of the frame. The main star of the nebula is kind of pointing to it in the hover image.
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- neufer
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Re: What is this object?
Geckzilla's first image is an overlay with which you can move your cursor back & forth to see the movement.wonderboy wrote:
doesnt look to have moved, unless im missing something!
What is intriguing is that the star movement is away from the central star just as
if the formation of the strange nebula had ejected enough material to release an orbiting star.
Art Neuendorffer
- geckzilla
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Re: What is this object?
It'd have to be moving very quickly if it's something local to NGC 2371! Much faster than the material in the nebula itself, which can also be observed expanding slightly in the mouseover set.
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Re: What is this object?
Faster than the material in the nebula currentlygeckzilla wrote:
It'd have to be moving very quickly if it's something local to NGC 2371!
Much faster than the material in the nebula itself, which can also be observed expanding slightly in the mouseover set.
but not faster than the nebula over it's lifetime since it still lies inside the nebula.
I admit that it is a long shot but it is curious nonetheless.
Art Neuendorffer
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Re: What is this object?
I'm more curious about the streak from the bright star pointing towards your little moving object. And do you have links to the FITS files? JPEGs aren't very amenable to analysis.geckzilla wrote:When I do processing for Hubble objects I often use data from several years apart. I see a lot of things that move slightly, like planetary nebulas expanding and more noticeable things like puffs of gas from HH objects. Parallax causes slight movement of stars sometimes. This one moved a lot more than things I've previously noticed, though. A whole three pixels. Usually things stick to the sub-pixel movements.
Anyway, these images are from observations of NGC 2371. The hover images are both WFPC2 data and they are 12 years apart, the first being from 1995 and the second from 2007. I'm sure it's not some kind of artifact. It's also present in some raw ACS/WFC data from 2009 which I'm not sure whether it's corrected for geometric distortion but I included the image anyway with it lined up as best I could. Not a lot of movement between the 2007 and 2009 observations.
I thought it could be some kind of trans-Neptunian object but when I compared it to those I realized it moves a lot more slowly. So maybe it is just a nearby star and the movement is just parallax. I'm sure the HLA is full of hopelessly dim little oddities like this.
Chris
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- geckzilla
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Re: What is this object?
Oh, the streak is one of the more annoying anomalies common for WFPC2 data. Any bright point source gets a kind of comet-like tail in the readout direction. See page 25.
Or, if you don't want to download a whole PDF, a quick, single sentence explanation here. (point number 10)
http://www.geckzilla.com/astro/NGC2371.rar
List of files inside:
1995 / Bond (6119 is the proposal ID)
hst_06119_08_wfpc2_f555w_pc_sci.fits
hst_06119_08_wfpc2_f555w_wf_sci.fits
2007 / Noll
hst_11093_03_wfpc2_f555w_wf_sci.fits
2009 / Wade (This is the raw one. Nicer resolution, though)
jb5724020_drz.fits
Additional FITS files and of course individual exposures are also all immediately available through the HLA simply by typing NGC 2371 into the search box.
Or, if you don't want to download a whole PDF, a quick, single sentence explanation here. (point number 10)
Here are the FITS files.Due to declining charge transfer efficiency (CTE), bright objects and artifacts (e.g. stars and cosmic rays) may have prominent comet-like tails of deferred charge in the anti-readout direction.
http://www.geckzilla.com/astro/NGC2371.rar
List of files inside:
1995 / Bond (6119 is the proposal ID)
hst_06119_08_wfpc2_f555w_pc_sci.fits
hst_06119_08_wfpc2_f555w_wf_sci.fits
2007 / Noll
hst_11093_03_wfpc2_f555w_wf_sci.fits
2009 / Wade (This is the raw one. Nicer resolution, though)
jb5724020_drz.fits
Additional FITS files and of course individual exposures are also all immediately available through the HLA simply by typing NGC 2371 into the search box.
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Re: What is this object?
Ah. I understand this characteristic of CCDs very well. I overlooked that the mouseover image was a rotated composite, so the angle of the smear is what got my attention. Now I see it is lined up with the physical array, and so makes sense.geckzilla wrote:Oh, the streak is one of the more annoying anomalies common for WFPC2 data. Any bright point source gets a kind of comet-like tail in the readout direction.
Chris
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Re: What is this object?
Is it possible that Art’s suggestion is correct, that this is a former part of the star system which has been released?neufer wrote:What is intriguing is that the star movement is away from the central star just as
if the formation of the strange nebula had ejected enough material to release an orbiting star.
Wikipedia lists the distance to NGC 2371 as being 4400 light years. How much distance would “three pixels” equate to?
Just as zero is not equal to infinity, everything coming from nothing is illogical.
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Re: What is this object?
Well, a WFPC2 pixel is 0.0455" wide so I guess you could throw 4400 in for two sides of a triangle and 3.7917×10^-5° for your one angle and figure that it moved 0.0029118 light years over about 12 years but it's all so much guessing...
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Re: What is this object?
I'd guess it's just a foreground star. A proper motion of 11 mas/yr isn't at all unusual- not even close to the fastest moving stars.geckzilla wrote:Well, a WFPC2 pixel is 0.0455" wide so I guess you could throw 4400 in for two sides of a triangle and 3.7917×10^-5° for your one angle and figure that it moved 0.0029118 light years over about 12 years but it's all so much guessing...
Chris
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- neufer
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Re: What is this object?
Just 73 km/sgeckzilla wrote:Well, a WFPC2 pixel is 0.0455" wide so I guess you could throw 4400 in for two sides of a triangle and 3.7917×10^-5° for your one angle and figure that it moved 0.0029118 light years over about 12 years but it's all so much guessing...BDanielMayfield wrote:Is it possible that Art’s suggestion is correct, that this is a former part of the star system which has been released?neufer wrote:
What is intriguing is that the star movement is away from the central star just as
if the formation of the strange nebula had ejected enough material to release an orbiting star.
Wikipedia lists the distance to NGC 2371 as being 4400 light years. How much distance would “three pixels” equate to?
It could well be a runaway star then, IMO.
Art Neuendorffer
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Re: What is this object?
If I buy a book on astrometry and put it under my pillow I'll know how to do this in the morning, right?
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Re: What is this object?
geckzilla wrote:
If I buy a book on astrometry and put it under my pillow I'll know how to do this in the morning, right?
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Last edited by neufer on Sat Oct 19, 2013 1:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Art Neuendorffer
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Re: What is this object?
I think you have to open it to the correct page before putting it under your pillow. Meme transfer can't get through the hardcovers, so you need to reduce the barriers to be able to absorb knowledge this way. Or buy a softcover book, I guess.geckzilla wrote:If I buy a book on astrometry and put it under my pillow I'll know how to do this in the morning, right?
Rob
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Re: What is this object?
Figure out how far the stupid little blip is, even though it's probably completely mundane.neufer wrote:Do what?
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Re: What is this object?
No amount of astrometry can determine that. At best, it can place bounds on the distance- in this case, such wide bounds as to be practically useless. More information is required than just the proper motion.geckzilla wrote:Figure out how far the stupid little blip is, even though it's probably completely mundane. :)neufer wrote:Do what?
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Re: What is this object?
However, had you actually slept on that astrometry tome, you'd know that. :)geckzilla wrote:Aw.
Chris
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Re: What is this object?
Hey Chris, how'd you sneak that key-board smilie past the computer Every time i type : and add )... it gives me this
Last edited by Beyond on Sat Oct 19, 2013 3:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: What is this object?
geckzilla wrote:Figure out how far the stupid little blip is, even though it's probably completely mundane.neufer wrote:Do what?
http://hubblesite.org/about_us/contact_us/ wrote:
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Re: What is this object?
He has "Disable smilies" checked in the Options box below the full editor.Beyond wrote:Hey Chris, how'd you sneak that key-board smilie past the computer Every time i type : and add )... it gives me this
Just call me "geck" because "zilla" is like a last name.
Re: What is this object?
Ah... never thought of that. Thanks, even if i don't remember it. :)))))))
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