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(meteorobs) Observation July 25/26 2001



On the night of 25/26, I observed for one hour at the lagoon site 
following a small neighborhood star party I attended earlier in the 
evening. This time, I had a few thin cirrus passing through for the 
entire period. I saw a bit less sporadics, but South delta Aquarids, 
Perseids and Sigma Capricornids (anthelions) made a decent 
appearance.

Pierre Martin



DATE: July 25/26 2001
BEGIN: 4:30 UT (0:30 EDT)  END: 5:30 UT (1:30 EDT)
OBSERVER: Pierre Martin (MARPI)
LOCATION: Long: -75.063 West; Lat: 45.269 North  Elevation:100m
City & Province: St-Albert, Ontario, CANADA
RECORDING METHOD: talking clock/tape recorder
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

OBSERVED SHOWERS: 3-letter code;    		 	radiant position
		NDA (N. Delta Aquarids)			21h30 -09
		SDA (S. Delta Aquarids)			22h22 -17
		SIA (S. Iota Aquarids)			21h25 -18
		SIG (Sigma Capricornids - ANT)		20h55 -17
		CAP (Alpha Capricornids)		20h03 -12
		PAU (Pisces Austrinids)			22h25 -32
		PER (Perseids)				01h25 +52
		ACY (Alpha Cygnids)			20h36 +49
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

OBSERVING PERIODS: 0 = none seen;  / = shower not observed

PERIOD(UT) FIELD     Teff  LM   SPO SDA PER SIG CAP NDA SIA PAU ACY napx sapx
4:30-5:30  20h46 +33 1.00  6.35  3   2   3   3   1   0   0   0   0   0   0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS:              1.00	 3   2   3   3   1   0   0   0   0   0   0 = 12
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
The first column (Period UT) refers to observing periods broken down 
as close as possible to one hour of true observing, in Universal 
Time. The second column (Field) is the area in in the sky where I 
centered my field of view. The third column (TEFF) represents 
effective observing time (corrected for breaks or any time I spent 
not looking at the sky). One hour = 1.00 teff. The fourth column (F) 
is for sky obstructions (clouds, buildings, ect). No obstructions = 
1.00 but any obstructions will make this number slightly higher. The 
5th column (LM) is the average naked eye limitimg magnitude, 
determined by triangle star counts. All following columns indicate 
the number of meteors for each shower observed.

MAGNITUDE DISTRIBUTIONS:

SHOWER  0  +1  +2  +3  +4  +5 	AVERAGE

SPO     1   0   0   1   1   0 	+2.33
PER	0   1   0   0   1   1	+3.33
SIG	0   0   0   1   2   0	+3.66
SDA	0   0   0   0   2   0	+4.0
CAP	0   0   0   0   1   0	+4.0
-----------------------------
TOTALS: 1   1   0   2   7   1
-----------------------------
Note: Magnitude scale is to determine the brightness of sky objects. 
Magnitude -8 is comparable to a quarter moon, magnitude -4 with the 
planet Venus, magnitude -1 with the brightest star Sirius, magnitude 
+2 to +3 with most average naked eye stars and magnitude +6 to +7 are 
the faintest stars the naked eye can see under typical dark 
conditions. A meteor of at least magnitude -3 is considered a 
fireball. The above table contains the magnitudes from all observed 
meteors, and the average for showers.

SKY OBSCURED:
15% clouds (cirrus) for entire period (F=1.17)
----------------------------------------------

Dead time: None

Breaks: None
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