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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: The parallax of all stars of visual magnitude greater than about 6.5 has already been measured. If Nemesis is a main-sequence star 1 parsec away, this requires Nemesis's mass to be less than about 0.4 solar masses. If it were less than about 0.05 solar masses its gravity would be too weak to trigger a comet storm. If Nemesis is on the main sequence, this mass range requires it to be a red dwarf. A red dwarf companion would probably have been missed by standard astronomical surveys. Nearby stars are usually found because they are bright or have high proper motion. However, Nemesis's proper motion would now be 0.01 arcsec/yr, and if it is a red dwarf its magnitude is about 10 - too dim to attract attention. Unfortunately, standard four-color photometry does not distinguish between red dwarfs and giants. So although surveys such as the Dearborn Red Star Catalog list stars by magnitude and spectral type, they do not identify the dwarfs. Every star of the correct spectral type and magnitude must be scrutinized. Our candidate list is a hybrid; candidate red stars are identified in the astrometrically poor Dearborn Red Star Catalog and their positions are corrected using the Hubble Guide Star Catalog. When errors in the Dearborn catalog make it impossible to identify the corresponding Hubble star, the fields are split so that we have one centering on each possible candidate. We are currently scrutinizing 3098 fields, which we believe contain all possible red dwarf candidates in the northern hemisphere. Since our last report the analysis and database software has been completely rebuilt to take advantage of updated hardware, to make the data more accessible, and to implement improved methods of data analysis. The software is now completed and we are eliminating stars every clear night.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Houston Univ., New Developments Regarding the KT Event and Other Catastrophes in Earth History; p 19-20
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: A prototype telescope system with six movable elements has been used with sharpness detection procedures to observe objects as dim as fifth magnitude. The real-time image sharpening technique does not rely on the use of a reference star. By correcting for atmospherically induced phase perturbations, the sharpening system has permitted restoration of stellar images to the diffraction limit (in one dimension) for a 30-cm telescope. Application of the system to the separation of double stars is reported.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Science; 200; May 5
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Measurements of characteristic speckle change times are presented for stars observed with an image-sharpening telescope installed and operated on equatorial mounts at Leuschner Observatory in Lafayette, California, and Lick Observatory at Mount Hamilton, California. Despite the short speckle change times encountered, it was possible to record dramatically improved stellar images on nights when the speckles changes relatively slowly. Sharpened images of Sirius and Arcturus are discussed.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Optical Society of America; vol. 67
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: A 30 x 5 cm aperture telescope employing six movable mirrors to compensate for atmospherically induced phase distortion is built and tested. A feedback system adjusts the mirrors in real time to maximize the intensity of light passing through a narrow slit in the image plane. Essentially diffraction-limited performance is achieved when imaging both laser and white-light objects through 250 m of turbulent atmosphere. The behavior of the telescope is accurately predicted by computer simulations. The system has yet to achieve its full potential, but has already operated successfully for objects as dim as 5th magnitude.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Optical Society of America; vol. 67
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The 30 by 5 cm aperture telescope described uses six moveable mirrors to compensate for phase distortions induced by the atmosphere. A feedback system is used to adjust the mirrors in real time to maximize the intensity of light passing through a narrow slit in the image plane. Using the telescope, diffraction-limited images of objects were obtained, using both laser and white light, through 250 meters of turbulent atmosphere.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Seminar on Imaging through the atmosphere; Mar 22, 1976 - Mar 23, 1976; Reston, VA
    Format: text
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