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Circular No. 7364 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION Mailstop 18, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. IAUSUBS@CFA.HARVARD.EDU or FAX 617-495-7231 (subscriptions) BMARSDEN@CFA.HARVARD.EDU or DGREEN@CFA.HARVARD.EDU (science) URL http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/iau/cbat.html ISSN 0081-0304 Phone 617-495-7244/7440/7444 (for emergency use only) COMETS C/2000 C2, C/2000 C3, C/2000 C4, C/2000 C5, C/2000 C6 D. A. Biesecker, SM&A Corporation and Goddard Space Flight Center, reports measurements of five comets observed with the coronagraphs aboard SOHO; the discovery observations are given below, while the astrometry and orbital elements appear on MPEC 2000-C50 through 2000-C54. Only C/2000 C6 appears to be a Kreutz sungrazer; it was first noticed by T. Lovejoy on SOHO web images, and Biesecker notes that its brightness ranged from V = 8.7 on Feb. 9.43 to 7.7 on Feb. 9.68 UT, and the comet showed a tail at 13 solar radii on C3 images. The other comets showed no tail. C/2000 C2 first noted by K. Cernis, remained relatively stable in brightness (V = 6.5-6.9) during Feb. 3.70-3.84. C/2000 C3, found by Biesecker, brightened from V = 6.7 on Feb. 4.59 to 5.9 on Feb. 4.79, before fading to V = 7.0 on Feb. 5.09. C/2000 C4, found by M. Meyer, was on a trajectory closely following that of C/2000 C3, and it was assumed that the orbits are identical with a difference Delta(T) = 0.60 day. C/2000 C4 brightened from V = 5.9 on Feb. 5.17 to 4.9 on Feb. 5.30, before fading to V = 6.7 on Feb. 5.67. C/2000 C5, found by M. Oates, was at V = 7.5-8.0 on Feb. 7. Comets C/2000 C2 and C/2000 C5 may also be related to each other. 2000 UT R.A. (2000) Decl. Comet Feb. 3.704 21 12.3 -15 11 C/2000 C2 4.563 21 16.4 -15 27 C/2000 C3 5.163 21 18.6 -15 15 C/2000 C4 7.788 21 28.1 -13 47 C/2000 C5 9.221 22 00.3 -17 13 C/2000 C6 AX J1740.2-2848 M. Sakano and K. Koyama, Kyoto University, write: "A post- facto analysis of the ASCA Galactic Center Survey data obtained on 1998 Sept. 7-8 shows a coherent pulsation of 729 +/- 14 s from AX J1740.2-2848 (located at R.A. = 17h40m11s.6, Decl. = -28o47'48", equinox 2000.0; 90-percent-confidence error radius 30"). The x-ray spectrum is fitted by a power law with photon index 0.7 (+0.7, -0.5), absorbed by log N_H = 22.5 (+0.3, -0.4). The pulsation, flat spectrum, and large absorption support AX J1740.2-2848 as a new x-ray binary pulsar near the Galactic center. The x-ray luminosity in the band 2-10 keV was 3 x 10**34 erg/s at a distance of 8500 pc." (C) Copyright 2000 CBAT 2000 February 12 (7364) Daniel W. E. Green
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