Here are the more interesting observations I made last night. More to follow. Conditions were difficult, with quite a lot of thin cloud forming in situ and drifting only slowly away to the north-east. 96-72A, USA 129, was low (15 degrees high) in the west. It showed one slow flare. The 83-8, NOSS 4, cluster is interesting because the components F, H, and the outlier E, are now separated by about 2 minutes. David. IntlId SiteYYMMDDHHMMSSss Sss TCHHMMmm DDMMm Mm E 9607201267500082022332027 010 12161275 -04182 2 5 9607201267500082022340033 010 12154367 +02223 1 5 9506601267500082023145782 010 12034785 +33346 1 5 9506601267500082023153014 010 12043080 +40080 1 5 9506601267500082100521327 010 12162581 +51097 2 5 9506601267500082100523180 010 12154202 +52136 2 5 9506601267500082100534558 010 12134907 +49289 2 5 8300806267500082101594609 010 12234561 +26205 1 5 8300808267500082102012677 010 12233165 +24060 1 5 8300805267500082102035474 010 12231502 +24590 1 5 8300805267500082102042970 010 12235822 +35026 15 5 David M Brierley Malvern, Worcestershire, UK Station 2675, 52.1358N 2.3264W 70m davidbrierley@waitrose.com -- The Information contained in this E-Mail and any subsequent correspondence is private and is intended solely for the intended recipient(s). For those other than the recipient any disclosure, copying, distribution, or any action taken or omitted to be taken in reliance on such information is prohibited and may be unlawful. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe from SeeSat-L by sending a message with 'unsubscribe' in the SUBJECT to SeeSat-L-request@lists.satellite.eu.org http://www2.satellite.eu.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Aug 21 2000 - 02:43:15 PDT