First object was Ed's Cosmos 1242 (81-08A, 12154). I had missed it last night preparing for lunar occultation, but this pass was a bit better for me, zooming by only 142 miles nearly overhead. After last object, a few neighbors stopped by for an impromptu view of moon and planets on a warm spring evening. First object was Cosmos FPAS later. 10544 77 112E 8336 G 20140505023529320 17 25 1511617+330762 38 10544 77 112E 8336 G 20140505023553650 17 25 1503992+222049 38 21799 91 076C 8336 G 20140505023929070 17 25 1325572-113288 58 S 21799 91 076C 8336 G 20140505023940980 17 25 1337858-080055 28 S 21799 91 076C 8336 G 20140505024006140 17 25 1404523-002518 77 S 32283 07 053A 8336 G 20140505024846710 17 25 1718969+395833 38 S 32283 07 053A 8336 G 20140505024904900 17 25 1743006+451592 28 S Brad Young Bright:20 x 80 Garrett binoculars fluid pan head tripod Dim:22" f/4.2 UC Obsession @ 100x. Numbers above and methods explained at: http://satobs.org/seesat/Aug-2013/0140.html COSPAR 8336 = TULSA1 +36.139208,-95.983429 660ft, 201m COSPAR 8335 = TULSA2 +35.8311 -96.1411 1083ft, 330m _______________________________________________ Seesat-l mailing list http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-lReceived on Sun May 04 2014 - 22:52:59 UTC
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