A condensed Iridium flare report in the prposed revised format. I still have possible amendments, but I will spend another mail to it. AzI eI AzM eM AzS +eS fS tt +m.m Ob Cospar xxxxx dd-mm-yy hh:mm:ss m xxx xx xxx xx xxx sxx xx xx sx.x II 24840 17-09-97 19:19:28 S 102 49 293 -15 +1.5 BD 97- 30 E 24836 17-09-97 19:28:25 S 102 58 294 -16 +1.8 BD 97- 30 A 24869 17-09-97 20:44:24 S 52 24 312 -26 +5.0 BD 97- 34 A 24842 19-09-97 19:00:40 S 139 28 289 -13 6 +0.0 BD 97- 30 G 24838 19-09-97 19:16:51 S 105 61 292 -15 14 -1.0 BD 97- 30 C 24839 19-09-97 19:28:05 S 162 27 294 -17 2 +4.0 BD 97- 30 D 24838 20-09-97 18:45:43 S 129 22 74 38 285 -11 25 12 +1.0 BD 97- 30 C 24839 20-09-97 18:54:14 S 137 25 76 44 287 -12 31 32 -1.5 BD 97- 30 D 24837 20-09-97 19:10:23 S 112 58 80 62 290 -14 46 11 -8 BD 97- 30 B 24840 21-09-97 18:48:17 S 138 24 76 44 285 -12 33 24 +3.5 BD 97- 30 E 24836 21-09-97 18:56:07 S 133 40 78 52 287 -13 34 +1.5 BD 97- 30 A 24841 21-09-97 19:04:25 S 106 55 80 61 289 -14 44 -2.0 BD 97- 30 F The flare-observation of 20-09-97 at 19:10:23 was real. It was even brighter than my dazzling observation of September 14th. But now my eldest son Chris and friend in astronomy was my witness. He estimated the same magnitude. He commented: the air around the blue flaring Iridium was brightened blueish. He also tried to photograph this event. ------ -- Bram Dorreman, COSPAR station 4160, Achel 1 -- latitude 51d 15' 49" north longitude 5d 28' 38" east -- +51.26361 degrees -5.47722 degrees -- height: 35 meter above sealevel. -- member of SeeSat-L -- Internet: A183231@nlevdpsb.snads.philips.nl ------ -- Kind regards, Bram Dorreman -- Origin IT Systems Management -- tel: +31 40 2788372 -- fax: +31 40 2786810