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Xi UMa added to 6 mag and 7 mag Leo maps
Dear Connie and Mark,
today I've been informed that Xi UMa was missing from Leo maps reaching to
6 mag and 7 mag -- obviously some problem with the Hipparcos catalogue.
Really, this is the brightest star with missing accurate coordinates there
(due to being a quickly moving binary star -- and the first one discovered
binary, by the very Herschel senior). My new colleague Karel tried to make
his own detailed maps and found a problem with the star, then checked my
maps and saw it misses there.
The star, Alula Australis, is the southermost claw of the Big Bear. It is
important, as this leg, similarly as the two other more conspicuous ones
in the sky, has to be formed by two stars, not just one...
I've corrected all Leo maps and the corresponding zips and tarballs; thaks
to this, Leo graymaps are for ZE=0.25 mag as the other ones now, not 0.20
mag as erroneously before.
As I tried to use screen maps myself (with the monitor set to minimum
light possible, still 100x brigher than our city sky), the only usable
mode was using a image viewer in a fullscreen mode. This way the maps with
varying limits can be changed easily, without any disturbing white
borders.
To ease such a way of comparing the sky and the screen, I've included a
series of zip files for all latitudes, with the bitmaps in separate
directories (a subset of the whole tree with the maps), see the master
directory
http://amper.ped.muni.cz/GaN2011/
Of course, my offer to produce graymaps with lower pixel numbers holds.
Just, what xnumber times ynumber they should be?
In Brno, the sky was never ZE=0.25 mag. Most of the time it was over 0.40
mag (as I measured sunset with a luxmeter), but at the end it even better
than 0.20 mag (the darkest night ever in my 5+years measurements).
I am inclined to prepare sets for more ZEs than just one. For stars below
40 degrees, it seems to be a must.
keep looking up,
Jenik