SN 2010lt

SN 2010lt is a supernova located in the galaxy UGC 3378 in Camelopardalis. It was discovered by amateur astronomers Kathryn Aurora Gray, her father Paul Gray, of Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada and David J. Lane of Stillwater Lake, Nova Scotia, Canada. Upon discovery, Kathryn Aurora Gray became the youngest person to ever discover a supernova, being 10 years old when she did so.[2][4] The previous record was held by the 14-year-old Caroline Moore.

SN 2010lt
Other designationsSN 2010lt
Event typeSupernova 
Spectral classIa (sub-luminous)[1]
Date2 January 2011
ConstellationCamelopardalis
Right ascension 06h 06m 09s[1]
Declination+83° 50 28[1]
EpochJ2000
Distance240 Mly[2]
Remnant?
HostUGC 3378[3]
Progenitor
Progenitor type
Colour (B-V)Unknown
Notable featuresNone
Peak apparent magnitude+17.0[3]
Websitewww.kathrynauroragray.com

Discovery

The images were taken at Lane's Abbey Ridge Observatory on 31 December 2010 with a Celestron C14 0.36-meter f/5.5 telescope, and the supernova was spotted by them on 2 January 2011.[1] The discovery was confirmed on 3 January 2011 by the amateur astronomers Brian Tieman and Jack Newton and announced by the IAU Central Bureau of Astronomical Telegrams at the Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was announced by the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada on the same day.[5]

Discoverers

  • David J. Lane: SN 2010lt is Lane's fourth discovery of a supernova. The previous were SN 1995F,[6] SN 2005B and SN 2005ea. All were discovered with Paul Gray.
  • Paul Gray: SN 2010lt is his seventh discovery of a supernova.
  • Kathryn Aurora Gray: her first discovery.

Description

SN 2010lt is about 20" west and 10" north of the galaxy center. It is a sub-luminous (1991bg-like) type Ia supernova and was discovered when near maximum light. The supernova could not be detected (detection limit approximately 18.5 of apparent magnitude) at its current position on images taken between October 2005 and March 2006.[1]

gollark: Idea: DNS to drone control bridge.
gollark: Depending on various factors, I may not in fact be free then.
gollark: Late 2022, that is.
gollark: I may be free from 2022.
gollark: I have not.

See also

References

  1. Latest Supernovae, Astronomy Section, Rochester Academy of Science; Images and discovery details of Supernovae SN2010lt in UGC 3378 Archived 2011-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, Abbey Ridge Observatory
  2. Canadian girl 'youngest to discover supernova', BBC, 4 January 2011
  3. CBAT's List of Recent Supernovae
  4. 10-Year-Old Girl Discovers Supernova, FoxNews, 4 January 2011
  5. Ten-year-old New Brunswick Girl Discovers Exploding Star, Deborah Thompson - The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, 3 January 2011
  6. Burke-Gaffney Observatory - Research, Team SUPERNova Scotia, 5-Jan-2011, Saint Mary's University (Halifax) archive


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