Nova in Vulpecula: V615 Vul ( = N Vul 2024 = PNV J19430751+2100204) V615 Vul ( = N Vul 2024 = PNV J19430751+2100204) was discovered on 2024 July 29 832 UT at unfiltered CCD magnitude 11 2 by the New Milky Way (NMW) survey, and reported on behalf of the survey team by K Sokolovsky (University of Illinois and Sternberg Astronomical Institute), S Korotkiy, N Potapov, and S Ostapenko; images were obtained with
Nova Vulpeculae 2024. - Observing and Imaging . . . - Stargazers Lounge Nova Vul 2024 is currently 9th magnitude Further details are in Gary Poyner's VSS Alert email below Location: RA 19 43 07 50 Dec +21 00 21 4 (J2000 0) If you wish to observe this nova, you can produce finding charts to the scale and magnitude limit you prefer from the AAVSO chart plotter Here is an example:
Nova in Vulpecula - Scientific Amateur Astronomy - Cloudy Nights As the magnitude continues to drop, now sub exposures are 600 sec sub exposures But the Balmer lines continue to show development While the Ha shows the most obvious, the Hb is also changing in structure
Bright Nova Lights Up Lupus Constellation - Sky Telescope Exciting news! On June 12th (June 12 9 UT), the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supern ovae (ASAS-SN) discovered a new 8 7-magnitude stellar object in Lupus Not long after, Yusuke Tampo, with the South African Astronomical Observatory (University of Cape Town), obtained a spectrum of the "new star" and identified it as a classical nova based on its spectral features and dramatic increase in
Nova in Vulpecula: V615 Vul - Society for Popular Astronomy V615 Vul ( = N Vul 2024 = PNV J19430751+2100204) was discovered on 2024 July 29 832 UT at unfiltered CCD magnitude 11 2 by the New Milky Way (NMW) survey, and reported on behalf of the survey team by K Sokolovsky (University of Illinois and Sternberg Astronomical Institute), S Korotkiy, N Potapov, and S Ostapenko; images were obtained with
Theres a tautology in Vulpecula of around mag 9 New nova in Vulpecula announced a coupla days ago, and confirmed spectroscopically, might be a fast one (well outburst was but that does not necessarily mean the decay lightcurve has to be too, but there is a bit of a correlation)
Possible Binocular Nova in Vulpecula - Variable Star Section A new nova has been reported in the constellation of Vulpecula (the Fox) It has been designated V0615 Vul, and can be found at 19:43h, +21d It may brighten to become visible in binoculars
Two more novae a bright maximum of Mira – British Astronomical . . . This nova was discovered as a magnitude 12 0 transient in Vulpecula on 2021 July 16 475 by Koichi Itagaki (Yamagata, Japan) Itagaki was using a 180mm camera lens with a CCD camera Similar simple set-ups have been used in several recent nova discoveries