A candidate - unfortunately there is no end points of trail on 60 second image. However, I don't find anything with this low inclination at this time. Positions below as if the edges of the frame were at the start time and end of image, but they were not. 78920 16 920A 7779 G 20170320025758000 17 25 0324341+163541 18 78920 16 920A 7779 G 20170320025858000 17 25 0333172+132145 18 Alternately, I assumed it passed a bright star at 3h29m +15 at the midpoint of 2:58:28 UT: 78920 14 019A 7779 F 20170320025828000 17 25 0328976+145980 37 which results in 0.263 degrees x-track error (to N) and -99.63s on Ted's corrected elset. Perhaps this will help pin it down. It is difficult to set short exposures on the remote scope. 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 Imaging (Itelescopes): 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 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 Sun Mar 19 2017 - 22:58:38 UTC
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