38109 12 014A 6242 G 20140817200605413 17 15 1208444+570216 37 S 37391 11 014B 6242 G 20140817203755721 17 15 2110355+195757 38 S 39232 13 043A 6242 G 20140817211446247 17 15 2202019+482622 37 S 38109 12 014A 6242 G 20140817214935140 17 15 1143406+522338 37 S --- UNID: 99768 99 768Z 6242 G 20140817211309642 37 15 2215282+581614 38 R+030 99768 99 768Z 6242 G 20140817211327869 37 15 2315097+675437 38 R+030 UNID 480 X 497 km 1 99768U 964268A 14229.88435034 0.00000000 00000-0 00000+0 0 09 2 99768 93.3759 287.9239 0012210 313.7634 92.1965 15.24544559 06 ​Saw naked eye when I was waiting for USA 245, variable from mag+4 to mag +3 more or less. Positions are not very accurate but enough for determine well a 93 degree inclination orbit I think.​ The regular brightness variation (with a period of about 10s) suggest me a rocket body. I saw it for about 30-40 seconds. -USA 186 not seen (last seen about 80 days ago). -The OTV 3 observation window closed yesterday for me. Maybe someone that lives closer to the equator still can see it. Jon. -- Jon Mikel, COSPAR 6242, 42.9453, -2.82839, 623m, Bitoriano, Basque Country. _______________________________________________ Seesat-l mailing list http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-lReceived on Sun Aug 17 2014 - 17:58:47 UTC
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