In case you didn't catch the
New Nova In Sagittarius
alert the other day... You might want to pay a little closer attention because it is brightening by leaps and bounds! Captured 4 days ago by our friends at
Macedon Ranges Observatory
and shared exclusively with UT Readers, the up-to-the-minute reports show it is now clearly a binocular object and may have even reached unaided eye visibility.
AAVSO Special Notice #106 April 25, 8:09 am EST
According to reports, Nova Sgr 2008 continues to brighten, with the last measurements from Alexandre Amorim indicating about V=6.5 on 20080423.0993.
Luckily, many AAVSO program stars are in Saggitarius, and if you use a B-scale or larger field with VSP, you will find many sequence stars from which to choose. Keep watching this nova as it brightens; few professional telescopes can observe this bright, while with a pair of binoculars it is an easy target. We will be uploading a BVRI calibration in a few days, in plenty of time to follow the decline.
This nova's coordinates are RA 18:05:58.90 Dec -27:13:56.3 . For those who would like to try their hand with binoculars? Aim just a couple of fingerwidths north of the tip of the "teapot" spout. It will by far be the brightest in the field. Use the included map - the circled area is the rough location and the magnitudes are set so that anything that appears brighter than what you see in the circle will be the nova.
Be sure to drop our friends at
Macedon Ranges Observatory
a
few lines
and let them know how much we all appreciate seeing this well ahead of the rest of the world's news!
Universe Today