Printable black and white chart of the japanese night sky at 18:42 ACST (90 minutes after sundown) as seen from Adelaide, exhibiting the placement of Nova V462 Lupi. Related views will likely be seen from elsewhere in Australia on the equal native time (90 minutes after sundown, click on to embiggen and print) | Printable black and white chart appropriate to be used with binoculars of the world round Nova V462 Lupi. The circle is the approximate discipline of view of 10×50 binoculars. The nova is roughly a binocular discipline from the intense stars beta and delta Lupi, Click on to embiggen and print |
south-eastern night sky at 18:42 ACST (90 minutes after sundown) as seen from Adelaide, exhibiting the placement of Nova V462 Lupi (circle marker). Related views will likely be seen from elsewhere in Australia on the equal native time (90 minutes after sundown). Click on to embiggen |
Chart appropriate to be used with binoculars of the world round Nova V462 Lupi (circle marker).The nova is roughly a binocular discipline from the intense stars beta and delta Lupi, Click on to embiggen. |
The nova is more likely to fade over the approaching days, and it’s worthwhile following it because it does so. It’s possible you’ll need to hold a report of its magnitude over this time.
My picture of V462 Lupi taken on 28 June, 19:01 ACST, samsung Galaxy S24 Extremely ƒ/3.4 2s 18.6 mm ISO3200 (5xZoom). Evaluate to charts above | My picture of V462 Lupi labelled |
Labels: binocular, nova, telescope