Confessions of a Variable Star Observer

Sun 5th
13:30-14:00

Confessions of a Variable Star Observer

Roy Axelsen

Astronomical Association of Queensland; Variable Stars South; American Association of Variable Star Observers

This is a lighthearted trip across about 20 years of amateur astronomical activities, mostly variable star observing. It starts with visual estimates of the magnitudes of variable stars, moves on to photoelectric photometry (PEP), abandons laborious PEP for DSLR photometry and ends with a monochromatic CMOS astronomical camera (actually, two of them one at a time), a filter wheel and scientific filters. Along the way there are serious looks at light curves that reveal the true natures of stars and the ways in which they can be analysed to yield new publishable data. There are various instruments starting with a pair of 7x50 binoculars, a 10” f/5 push-to Dobsonian, a brief love affair with an 18” f/5 truss-tube Dobsonian fitted after a while with an Argo Navis telescope computer, 80mm and 120mm f/7.5 ED refractors on equatorial mounts which gave me some of my most fruitful data, and finally a 200mm f/10 Schmidt-Cassegrain instrument on (of all things) an equatorial wedge. As the title says there are confessions, which are about what perhaps should and should not have been done, but there are no regrets.