4  The day has come


Gordon Bromage and Hannah Worters at SAAO:
we've had clear nights for 5.5 out of 6 nights so far, so hope tonight will stay the same... Horace Horologium (nickname for 0241-53) has been very quiet with barely a flicker of variability and no obvious flares so far - I am sure it is waiting to shine in the limelight tonight and flare for us...
Alan Whiting & students (CTIO, Chile):
It's now about 1h30m UT, and we've begun photometry on the stars. We have a CCD, exposing for 30s in B, readout time giving us a picture about every minute. We have rotated the spectrograph to get both stars, but a few minutes ago were still having trouble with something mechanical and weren't observing yet. In U we seem to be limited to 30s exposure in order to get any significant number of counts on the fainter stars. [...later on...] We are also taking spectra with about the same time resolution, limited by the brightness of the fainter star.
Carlos Alberto and Germano Quast (Brasil):
Although the sky is not completely cloudy now (local time 14H) the predictions are it will be cloudy at the beginning of the night. Let us see. Anyway, I suppose we can observe the stars only until about 01:00 or 01:30 TU. Seeing may be a problem observing this system and the Zeiss telescope has not a good tracking for high zenith distance.