Документ взят из кэша поисковой машины. Адрес оригинального документа : http://www.astro.louisville.edu/transits/transits.cgi
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Дата индексирования: Sat Apr 9 22:45:22 2016
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Поисковые слова: aurora borealis
Transit Finder

Find Exoplanet Transits

This form calculates which transits of the 1039 known transiting exoplanets are observable from a given location at a given time. Specify a time window, an observing location (either an observatory from the list or choose "Enter latitude/longitude" at the end of the list), and optionally any filters (e.g. minimum transit depth or elevation). The output includes transit time and elevation, and links to further information about each object, including finding charts and airmass plots.

Choose an observatory, or manual latitude/longitude entry:

  Use UTC  /  Use observatory's local time.

Base date for transit list (mm-dd-yyyy or 'today'):

From that date, show transits for the next days. (Also include transits from the previous days.)

Only show transits with an elevation (in degrees) of at least:

at ingress or egress:     These elevation constraints are ANDed; both must be met.
  Unspecified values default to 0.
at mid-transit:

Only show transits with a depth of at least millimag.

Only show transits of a star brighter than magnitude .

Only show targets with names matching this string: .
(Not case sensitive; can be a Perl regular expression.)

Only show targets with names not matching this string: .
(Not case sensitive; can be a Perl regular expression.)

Output format
HTML table
CSV file for calendar import. (Save resulting output to a text file, then import into your observing calendar, e.g., import into Google Calendar.)

Show the input ephemeris data used to generate the target list (useful for debugging if a particular target isn't showing up as you expect):
No
Yes

This page uses input ephemeris data from exoplanets.org, maintained by Jason Wright.

This software producing this page was created by Eric Jensen.


Last update: November 7, 2012
kielkopf at louisville dot edu