Abstract

AbstractVideo recordings of images of binary stars at the focus of a 0.36m telescope have been used to select images recorded in instants of good seeing. The selected images have been analysed to give separations and position angles for the binary systems which are in good agreement with values predicted from previous observations. In these exploratory observations it has been shown that separations of 0.9 arcseconds can be measured with an accuracy of ~2% and position angles to ~1–2 degrees when the average seeing was ~1.3 arcseconds. These observations demonstrated that the diffraction limit of the telescope could be reached when the seeing was a factor of 2–3 greater than it. A binary with three magnitudes difference in the brightness of its components has been measured with comparable accuracy although difficulties are anticipated for binaries with components closer than ~2 arcseconds with this magnitude difference. The limiting magnitude is determined by the need to limit exposure times of individual frames to be comparable with or less than the atmospheric coherence time.

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