Electronic Telegram No. 718 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION M.S. 18, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. IAUSUBS@CFA.HARVARD.EDU or FAX 617-495-7231 (subscriptions) CBAT@CFA.HARVARD.EDU (science) URL http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/iau/cbat.html BRIGHT VARIABLE STAR IN CASSIOPEIA U. Munari, A. Siviero, L. Tomasella, and M. Valentini, Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Astronomical Observatory of Padova, write that a series of echelle spectra (range 380-730 nm, resolving power 20000) have been secured of the new bright variable star in Cas (cf. CBETs 711, 712) with the Asiago 1.82-m telescope on Nov. 1.85, 2.73, and 3.71 UT. The spectra are characterized by a hot continuum with Balmer and Mg II 448.1-nm absorption lines whose heliocentric radial velocities on the three nights are -36, -34, and -34 (+/- 1) km/s, respectively. The broad wings of the Balmer lines indicate a surface gravity similar to that of main sequence dwarfs. No helium lines are visible, and Balmer absorption lines do not present an emission core. The absorption line cores are sharp enough to exclude a fast rotation. The strong insterstellar Na I D doublet is visible at heliocentric radial velocity -14 (+/- 1) km/s. The mean 0.049-nm equivalent width of the Na I D2 589.0-nm line corresponds to a reddening E(B-V) = 0.29, following calibration via Munari and Zwitter (1997, A.Ap. 318, 269). The object's brightness has been noted to decrease markedly from one night to the next. In comparison with the spectra from Nov. 1.85, the Balmer and Mg II 448.1-nm aborption lines have increased their equivalent widths by 30 percent on Nov. 2.73 and by 55 percent on Nov. 3.71. On the Nov. 3.71 spectrum, H_beta reaches a 1.25-nm equivalent width, which is appropriate for an early A-type main-sequence star. Inspection of the stellar seeing disk (2".2) on the TV screen of the telescope guiding system does not reveal the presence of a close bright companion. T. Iijima, Astronomical Observatory of Padova, reports that spectra (range 360-740 nm), of variable star report on CBET 711 were taken with a Boller & Chivens grating spectrograph mounted on the 1.22-m telescope of the Asiago Astrophysical Observatory on Nov. 2.08 and 2.12 UT. The spectra show an extremely blue continuum superimposed by clear absorptions of the H I Balmer series. Also, H-alpha is in pure absorption. The absorption lines of Ca II H and K and Na I D are seen; meanwhile, no He I line is seen in absorption nor in emission. The continuum is still bluer than that of the O5-type star HD 217086, but the absorption features resemble an A-type star. This object may be a type of dwarf novae in outburst. R. Tucker, Tucson, AZ, reports the following astrometry of this variable star from several CCD images: R.A. = 0h09m21s.98 +/- 0s.02, Decl. = +54d39'45".6 +/- 1".6 (equinox 2000.0). Tucker provides the following V magnitudes for the variable: Nov. 1.148 UT, 9.2; 1.188, 9.3; 2.089, 9.3. A star of red mag 12.0 is visible on a Digitized Sky Survey U.K. Schmidt plate from Sept. 19.319, and he measures position end figures for that star: 21s.97, 44".0. (There is also a nearby star of red mag 11.9-12.0 located at position end figures 24s.66 +/- 0s.02, 40'08".4.) Tucker adds that his spectra taken with a 0.36-m Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope (+ SBIG SGS spectrograph; range 421.9-750.4 nm; disperson 0.43 nm/pixel) shows hydrogen absorption lines fading in intensity between Nov. 1.17 and 2.12; the spectrum appears very similar to that of a star of spectral class A7 except for a weak emission feature at 466.7 nm. S. Nakano, Sumoto, Japan, forwards the following position end figures for the variable star from K. Itagaki (Teppo-cho, Yamagata, Japan; 0.60-m f/5.7 reflector), who reported unfiltered mag 9.4 from his image taken on Nov. 1.431 UT (which was fainter than on the previous night): 21s.98, 43".9. N. N. Samus, Institute of Astronomy, Russian Academy of Sciences, writes that S. V. Antipin (Sternberg Institute) has searched 405 plates of the Moscow archive spanning 1964 July 12-1994 Oct. 7; the star that now appears to be varying in brightness appears constant at photographic magnitude 11.8 +/- 0.1 (using Tycho B magnitudes for comparison stars). If variable, this star never was outside the magnitude range 11.7-12.0 on these archival plates. G. M. Hurst, Basingstoke, Hants, England, reports that M. Collins (Everton, Bedfordshire, England) has derived the following magnitudes from his images secured for the U.K. Nova/Supernova Patrol using a Canon 10D camera and 85-mm-focal-length f/1.8 lens (30-s twin exposures for each date): 2006 Sept. 22.925 UT, 11.7; Oct. 21.863, 10.9. Visual magnitude estimates: Oct. 31.89 UT, 8.5 (M. Reszelski, Szamotuly-Galowo, Poland); 31.910, 8.6 (R. J. Bouma, Groningen, The Netherlands); 31.919, 8.6 (P. Schmeer, Bischmisheim, Germany); 31.984, 8.7 (Hurst); Nov. 1.753, 9.4 (Schmeer); 1.759, 9.5 (Bouma); 1.844, 9.3 (A. Diepvens, Balen, Belgium); 2.740, 10.1 (Diepvens); 2.84, 9.6 (Reszelski); 3.94, 10.5 (Reszelski). NOTE: These 'Central Bureau Electronic Telegrams' are sometimes superseded by text appearing later in the printed IAU Circulars. (C) Copyright 2006 CBAT 2006 November 3 (CBET 718) Daniel W. E. Green