65- 98 C 97-01-15 18:27 LB S, mag 5 83- 4 A 97-01-15 18:12 LB almost S, mag 5 87- 27 B 97-01-15 17:09:37 LB 90.9 2.0 2 45 MM, mag 3->inv 88- 6 A 97-01-15 17:46:02 LB 30.3 0.5 6 5.0 AA, mag 5->6 88- 78 A 97-01-15 18:23:54 LB 26.9 0.2 20 1.34 FF, mag 4->5 88-102 A 97-01-15 17:17 LB 30.7 1.0 2 15.3 MM, mag 4->7 90- 57 B 97-01-14 04:04 LB S, mag 7 91- 7 B 97-01-15 17:24:10 LB 133.4 0.5 4 33.4 AA, mag 6->inv 91- 29 B 97-01-15 18:40:27 LB 133.5 2.0 2 67 MM, mag 5->inv 95- 2 D 97-01-15 17:54:20 LB 97.4 0.2 10 9.74 AA, mag 5->inv 96- 51 B 97-01-15 18:04:15 LB 331.3 0.2 460 0.720 FF, mag 3->inv Using Skymap I identified the unknown that I observed yesterday just in front of 93- 55 C as 90- 57 B. Not yet hard evidence that 91- 7 B is indeed accelerating. 96- 51 B was sometimes hard to measure. But using laptimings when the flashes were countable, I was able to determine the total number of flashes. -- Greetings and clear skies Leo Barhorst Alkmaar The Netherlands 52.65 North 4.767 East 1 m ASL Member of Seesat-L ------------------------------------------------------------ Every day I wonder about the things I see in the (night)sky