Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Analysis of Lictoria: Mar 27, 2002 EST
At this point,
you should have completed
the initial steps in reducing
our images of asteroid 1107 Lictoria.
The goal for today is to measure instrumental
magnitudes for the asteroid and two comparison
stars, and look for variations in the asteroid's brightness
with time.
Recall the 5 groups of images:
image names EST start filter exptime
--------------------------------------------------
1107a 10:03:40 PM none 15 1107a.001, 1107a.002, etc.
1107b 10:25:50 none 15
1107c 10:45:40 none 15
1107d 11:09:00 none 15
1107e 11:29:30 none 15
You can find copies of all the images at
http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys559/lectures/mar27_2002/
Each image has a name like 1107a.001.fit;
so the full URL to an individual image would look like:
http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys559/lectures/mar27_2002/1107a.001.fit
Using your subset of the images, you should today
- Try to find the asteroid. It may help to do this:
- Display the first image in your group on the screen via SIP.
- Open another browser window, start up another SIP process,
and load an image from another sequence.
For example,
if your group is "a", "b", or "c",
I suggest you pick 1107e.001;
if your group is "d" or "e",
choose 1107a.001
The key is to pick an image taken at least an hour
before or after your group's images.
- Display the other image, arranging the contrast, etc.,
so that it looks similar to your own image.
- Try to move the two windows so that the two different
images overlap on the screen. Toggle back and forth
between the images, shifing them relative to each other
so that the stars on one image align with those of the other.
This is called blinking. Look for an object which moves.
- Once you have found the asteroid, use the Analyze
menu item to select
Determine Centroid or Instrumental Magnitude....
Follow the instructions on the
SIP Photometry page
to determine the instrumental magnitudes of three objects
in the image:
- the asteroid ("A")
- a bright star close to it ("B")
- a faint star, similar to the asteroid, also nearby ("C")
I will point out the stars "B" and "C" you should use.
Choose an aperture box which is 7 pixels on a side,
with a fixed 7-pixel background box located off to one side,
in the clear sky background.
- For each one of your images, record the instrumental magnitudes
of the asteroid and stars "B" and "C".
- Make a table which shows:
instr mag instr mag instr mag
truncated JD asteroid B C
--------------------------------------------------
- Type your table into an Excel spreadsheet.
Save the spreadsheet as Excel, and also save it in
comma-separated-value format.
- Calculate the differential magnitudes between the
asteroid and bright star, (A-B), and the faint star and
bright star (C-B), for each image.
- Make a graph which shows time (in JD) on the x-axis,
and the differential magnitudes on the y-axis.
We will combine all the data from all the sets of data
together to make a master graph.
If the asteroid is really varying as it rotates,
then its light curve will wave up and down in a
periodic fashion.
The faint star serves as a check:
if it, too, varies relative to the bright star,
then there is probably something wrong with the data
or the reductions.
Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.