Forgot to mention last set was under the best August skies I've seen in quite some time - 7 Pleiads and 7 stars inside Pegasus square naked eye in downtown! Also great view of Mercury back in morning sky and [Finally!] decent views of Mars in 125mm scope. Tonight - well, you know. Not sure if its high cirrus ahead of more storms or Pacific NW smoke. 28888 05 042A 8336 P 20180822020149800 17 25 1907484-212088 48 28888 05 042A 8336 P 20180822020202690 17 25 1907106-161205 48 28888 05 042A 8336 P 20180822020417900 17 25 0141435+881653 48 39650 14 019A 8336 P 20180822023033030 17 25 2220353+281357 48 39650 14 019A 8336 P 20180822023046280 17 25 2204163+325691 38 39650 14 019A 8336 P 20180822023059170 17 25 2143419+381695 27 16591 86 014A 8336 P 20180822024538340 17 25 1908376+060653 18 F+060 10 002800 16591 86 014A 8336 P 20180822024553770 17 25 1917046+015968 68 F Brad Young Visual: Bright:20 x 80 Celestron binoculars Dim:22" f/4.2 UC Obsession COSPAR 8336 =TULSA1 +36.139208,-95.983429 660ft, 201m COSPAR 8335 =TULSA2 +35.8311 -96.1411 1083ft, 330m Remote Imaging: 7779 32.92 -105.528 7000 Mayhill, New Mexico USA 7778 -31.2733 149.0644 3400 Siding Spring, NSW, Australia 7777 38.165653 -2.326735 5150 Nerpio, Spain 7780 37.07 -119.4 4610 Auberry CA USA 7782 -32.008 116.135 984 Perth, WA, Australia Numbers above and methods explained at: http://www.satobs.org/seesat/Jan-2015/0074.html _______________________________________________ Seesat-l mailing list http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-lReceived on Wed Aug 22 2018 - 02:31:27 UTC
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