

FMO Identification Quiz PART II |
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Not an FMO
The object is not moving. The objects, which appears to be stationary in blinking images, should NOT be submitted. |
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Not an FMO
This object appears in only one frame of this blinking image and it is trailed. Although this particular object turned out to be a cosmic ray, it is a reportable image. |
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Not an FMO
This object is a satellite. The trail is too long for reliable recovery. We ask reviewers not to submit this type of object. |
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Not an FMO The object in the center is a galaxy. There is an asteroid moving near the bottom left corner. However it is not trailing so we ask reviewers NOT to submit it. |
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Aha! This is a real FMO. |
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The object may or may not be valid but is too faint for reliable recovery. We ask reviewers NOT to submit very faint objects. |
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Not an FMO
Trail too long and also stationary in the images. This seems to be a diffraction spike from a bright star. Since it is not moving this object is NOT reportable. |
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This object is stationary. This is a galaxy overlaid with a star. Since trail is not moving, this object is not reportable. |
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Not an FMO This is a ghosted star caused by crosstalk. For more details please read tutorial page. This is not reportable object. |
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Did you get this correct!? This is a reportable FMO. |
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This is a reportable FMO. However since the trail is long, recovery of this object is a challenge. The long trails have small chance of getting MPC designations.
MPC NAME: N/A DATE DISCOVERED: March 20, 2004 DISCOVERED BY: Robert Klein Tutorial's FMOs that Move Too Fast Page |
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