Marco wrote: >> I also captured one of the Elisa East objects (only one, interestingly enough), but the video would not astrometrically solve (I suspect because the center of the FOV is near RA 00:00:00). >> Yesterday night I also imaged 2 Elisa objects. 40053 14 034A 4172 E 20180913203954925 17 25 0044533+730976 37 S 40053 14 034A 4172 E 20180913203959940 17 25 0106902+750687 37 S 40053 14 034A 4172 E 20180913204005916 17 25 0139472+770553 37 S 38008 11 076B 4172 E 20180913204006912 17 25 0042241+730980 37 S 38008 11 076B 4172 E 20180913204013931 17 25 0115929+755129 37 S 38008 11 076B 4172 E 20180913204018948 17 25 0146804+773061 37 S 38010 11 076D 4172 E 20180913204023928 17 25 0056021+744699 37 S 38010 11 076D 4172 E 20180913204028909 17 25 0122888+763742 37 S 38010 11 076D 4172 E 20180913204032932 17 25 0148582+775318 37 S Both were hardly visible in the images, but using Sattools option of concentrating all pixels of the track in a single point both sats showed up with 38008 being brighter than 38010. About 10 sec earlier a brighter sat passed on the same track: 40053 14 034A. Regards Leo _______________________________________________ Seesat-l mailing list http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-lReceived on Sat Sep 15 2018 - 01:54:26 UTC
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