After a fortnight of mostly overcast night skies, there were some breaks this morning (March 29). 88-56A, 80-93A and 88-32B were spotted with the naked eye, all about mag +4 steady, and identified using Rob Matson's SkyMap. 98-67A (the ISS) was mag -0.5 steady in the SW sky. David. IntlId SiteYYMMDDHHMMSSss Sss TCHHMMmm DDMMm Mm E 8005203267501032903461282 010 12141109 +43496 3 5 8807801267501032904011962 010 12083445 +46563 3 5 8807801267501032904024169 010 12102563 +39116 15 5 8807801267501032904033044 010 12112522 +29441 1 5 8805601267501032904203819 010 12111266 +54524 2 5 8805601267501032904220896 010 12142500 +19300 1 5 8009301267501032904254782 010 1215222 +60280 3 5 8009301267501032904271642 010 1203530 +71146 2 5 8803202267501032904313327 010 12150210 +25003 15 5 9101701267501032904393672 010 12133322 +39482 3 5 9101701267501032904402108 010 12150820 +26425 1 5 9101701267501032904410453 010 12161500 +11300 1 5 9806701267501032904433140 010 12154911 -03418 2 5 8300801267501032904490065 010 12140730 +59400 2 5 8300801267501032904492782 010 12150577 +57391 2 5 7905001267501032905004613 010 12180899 +43337 1 5 David M Brierley Malvern, Worcestershire, UK Station 2675 52.1358N 2.3264W 70m davidbrierley@waitrose.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe from SeeSat-L by sending a message with 'unsubscribe' in the SUBJECT to SeeSat-L-request@lists.satellite.eu.org http://www2.satellite.eu.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu Mar 29 2001 - 00:23:26 PST