Kevin, your ID looks almost perfect when I simulate your observations in ObsReduce I get -289.4 s (early) and 0.075/0.100 degrees cross-track errors (the latter mainly due to my approximations. But IDsat gave these errors, and apart from the similarity in tdiff it is not easy to spot it as a candidate : tdiff Sep Mv RCS Range Trk FE Vang Age Unc Name Desig NORAD s deg pred m^2 km deg hour deg/s days s -------------- -------- ----- -------- ----- ------ ---- ----- --- ---- ----- ---- ------- NOSS 1 (D) 76038D 8836 -299.48 2.69 7.0 v ???? 1054 35 3.7 0.36 32 28.3 5 NOSS 1 (D) 76038D 8836 -298.97 2.77 7.0 v ???? 1027 35 3.6 0.38 32 28.3 6 2013/4/2 Kevin Fetter <kfetter@yahoo.com>: > I had aimed at area, between Intelsat 23 and Galaxy 11, to check on them for flaring. Galaxy 11 flared up, at 2 different times, just not very bright. > > As I went through the video, and checking on which one's happened to pass across the feild of view, I had one pass by, which nothing to shown to pass by at the time, and path seen. > > 99999 99 999A 1775 G 20130402084658145 15 25 1803750-081244 37 S > 99999 99 999A 1775 G 20130402084706620 15 25 1813124-062301 37 S > > Rough orbit, shows how it passed across the feild of view. > > unknown 040213 > 1 99999 13092.36604884 0.00000257 00000-0 50000-4 0 05 > 2 99999 59.3412 224.6885 0010828 288.5632 116.8792 14.62831023 08 > > Noss 1D ( 08836 ) has a low perigee orbit, and hasn't been observed in 1 month, so I will blame that one. > _______________________________________________ > Seesat-l mailing list > http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-l -- ---------------------------------------- Björn Gimle, COSPAR 5919 59.2576 N, 18.6172 E, 23 m Phone: +46 (0)8 571 43 312 Mobile: +46 (0) 704 385 486 _______________________________________________ Seesat-l mailing list http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-l
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