TPOD Dec 15, 2010 Novus Ratio

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Nereid
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Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2010 11:21 am

TPOD Dec 15, 2010 Novus Ratio

Post by Nereid » Sun Jan 09, 2011 5:49 am

TPOD Dec 15, 2010 Novus Ratio, by Stephen Smith.

The paper which the University of California, San Diego, press release is based on (which PR this TPOD seems to rely upon) is Hounsell et al. (2010), published in ApJ - link, as usual, is to the arXiv preprint abstract.

Here is the abstract:
Hounsel et al. wrote:
Exquisite Nova Light Curves from the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI)

We present light curves of three classical novae (KT Eridani, V598 Puppis, V1280 Scorpii) and one recurrent nova (RS Ophiuchi) derived from data obtained by the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI) on board the Coriolis satellite. SMEI provides near complete sky-map coverage with precision visible-light photometry at 102-minute cadence. The light curves derived from these sky maps offer unprecedented temporal resolution around, and especially before, maximum light, a phase of the nova eruption normally not covered by ground-based observations. They allow us to explore fundamental parameters of individual objects including the epoch of the initial explosion, the reality and duration of any pre-maximum halt (found in all three fast novae in our sample), the presence of secondary maxima, speed of decline of the initial light curve, plus precise timing of the onset of dust formation (in V1280 Sco) leading to estimation of the bolometric luminosity, white dwarf mass and object distance. For KT Eri, Liverpool Telescope SkyCamT data confirm important features of the SMEI light curve and overall our results add weight to the proposed similarities of this object to recurrent rather than to classical novae. In RS Oph, comparison with hard X-ray data from the 2006 outburst implies that the onset of the outburst coincides with extensive high velocity mass-loss. It is also noted that two of the four novae we have detected (V598 Pup and KT Eri) were only discovered by ground-based observers weeks or months after maximum light, yet these novae reached peak magnitudes of 3.46 and 5.42 respectively. This emphasizes the fact that many bright novae per year are still overlooked, particularly those of the very fast speed class. Coupled with its ability to observe novae in detail even when relatively close to the Sun in the sky, we estimate that as many as 5 novae per year may be detectable by SMEI.

Sparky
Posts: 3517
Joined: Tue Jul 20, 2010 2:20 pm

Re: TPOD Dec 15, 2010 Novus Ratio

Post by Sparky » Thu Jan 20, 2011 3:46 pm

-we estimate that as many as 5 novae per year may be detectable by SMEI.
oh, hell..as long as you are speculating, do what your consensus group has always done, come up with a huge number to impress the rest of the cult and yourselves.

With all your expensive toys, the only weak spot in your scientific line is the lack of education and scientific method to analyze what you are seeing.

grandpa always said, "use what works", so i guess pseudoscience is working for you to pay the bills and feed the egos.... :D
"It is dangerous to be right in matters where established men are wrong."
"Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire

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