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IAUC 6092: 1994r; 1993g; SATURN

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                                                  Circular No. 6092
Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams
INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION
Postal Address: Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A.
IAUSUBS@CFA.HARVARD.EDU or FAX 617-495-7231 (subscriptions)
Phone 617-495-7244/7440/7444     TWX 710-320-6842 ASTROGRAM CAM
MARSDEN@CFA.HARVARD.EDU or GREEN@CFA.HARVARD.EDU (science)


COMET MACHHOLZ (1994r)
     The following precise positions have been reported:

     1994 UT             R.A. (2000) Decl.        m1    Observer
     Oct.  9.33938    8 40 07.41   +55 21 24.1   12.5   Viscome
           9.34947    8 40 06.18   +55 21 21.4            "
           9.35072    8 40 06.07   +55 21 21.5            "
           9.36258    8 40 04.80   +55 21 18.4            "
           9.44497    8 39 55.64   +55 20 58.8   12.0   Helin
           9.48750    8 39 50.99   +55 20 47.1            "

G. Viscome (Lake Placid, NY).  0.37-m f/6 reflector + telecompressor + CCD.
E. Helin, K. Lawrence, B. Arthur and J. Smallwood (Palomar).  0.46-m
   Schmidt.  Measurer Lawrence.  Object slightly diffuse.

     Total visual magnitude estimates: Oct. 9.39 UT, 11.3 (A. Hale, near
Chaparral, NM, 0.41-m reflector); 9.49, 11-12 (D. E. Machholz, Colfax, CA,
0.25-m reflector).


PERIODIC COMET REINMUTH 2 (1993g)
     Total magnitude estimates, visual unless otherwise stated:
Aug. 7.35 UT, 13.2 (Hale); 14.42, 13.4 (Hale); Sept. 6.98, 14.7 (P.
Pravec, Ondrejov, Czech Republic, 0.65-m reflector + CCD); 9.33, 13.5
(Hale); Oct. 5.98, [13.5 (S. Garro, Hautes-Alpes, France, 0.20-m reflector).


SATURN
     V. J. Tejfel and G. A. Kharitonova, Laboratory of Lunar and
Planetary Physics, Kazakhstan Academy of Sciences, Alma-Ata, report:
"During photographic observations with the 1-m telescope at the
high-altitude observing station at Assy in good atmospheric conditions
during Sept. 24-30 we independently detected a light spot (cf. IAUC 6079,)
6080) in Saturn's equatorial region extending some 30-35 deg in longitude.
The spot is most clearly visible on photographs in blue and violet and
has less contrast in green, orange and red.  Its longitude (uncertainty
+/- 2 deg) in both systems I and III changed noticeably: Sept. 25.712 UT,
LI = 224 deg, LIII = 56 deg; 28.733, 253 deg, 344 deg; 29.597, 265 deg,
327 deg.  From these observations the spot's own rotation period was
estimated tentatively as 10h22m."


1994 October 10                (6092)              Brian G. Marsden

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