23937 96 029F 8539 G 20040514021453840 17 25 1706843+654326 38 23937 96 029F 8539 G 20040514021529400 17 25 1650893+561972 38 23937 96 029F 8539 G 20040514021545030 17 25 1646343+520560 38 23937 96 029F 8539 G 20040514021549880 17 25 1645207+504813 38 23937 96 029F 8539 G 20040514021632630 17 25 1637581+393675 38 14139 83 060C 8539 G 20040514022234400 17 25 1439449+281751 38 14139 83 060C 8539 G 20040514022242230 17 25 1440390+302893 38 14139 83 060C 8539 G 20040514022305460 17 25 1443444+372140 38 14139 83 060C 8539 G 20040514022422380 17 25 1503684+593245 38 14139 83 060C 8539 G 20040514022333630 17 25 1448819+453996 38 At 2.23.52 UTC another sat overtook #14139. IdSat was used to id it as #70025HJ / #04988 #14139 had a heading of 347 azimuth and visual angular velocity of .29 degree per second , and #04988 had a heading of 351 with visual angular velocity of .37 degree per second. That was a fun first sighting for me. Lat. 39.4707 Lon. -79.3388 Alt. 2753 ft. -4 UTC What these numbers mean: http://www.satobs.org/position/IODformat.html ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Frequently Asked Questions, SeeSat-L archive: http://www.satobs.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
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