21799 91 076C 8539 G 20031019234458370 17 25 2251444+262346 37 21799 91 076C 8539 G 20031019234613370 17 25 0029387+405052 95 21799 91 076C 8539 G 20031019234643390 17 25 0107813+435093 97 14729 84 012D 8539 G 20031020005315560 17 25 1942948+243395 57 14729 84 012D 8539 G 20031020005325910 17 25 1950914+223450 57 14729 84 012D 8539 G 20031020005338870 17 25 2000867+200032 37 05678 71 110A 8539 G 20031020005750640 17 25 1708823+654887 97 05678 71 110A 8539 G 20031020005829540 17 25 1839582+611714 67 05678 71 110A 8539 G 20031020005836180 17 25 1853655+595895 37 05678 71 110A 8539 G 20031020005846680 17 25 1914225+574778 97 While following #05678 at 00.59.16 UT an unknown was seen in FOV of telescope going the opposite direction. Identified using Skymap as #20862 / #90081AA. There was only a 6 km difference in their ranges. I missed because of clouds the Chinese in space and have missed Expedition 8 heading to ISS because of no visible passes. I did do an alldat.tle search of near transits on beta Cassiopeia and beta Pegasus using Skymap and saw 8 first time sightings for me near these stars. I was able to see and follow #10871 / #76077CZ, it was very dim and predicted to be 11.1 mag. I did miss several that were predicted with various magnitudes. Lat 39.4707 Lon -79.3388 Alt 2573 ft -4 UTC ----------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from SeeSat-L, send a message with 'unsubscribe' in the SUBJECT to SeeSat-L-request@satobs.org List archived at http://www.satobs.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Oct 19 2003 - 23:16:34 EDT