28054 03 048A 2701 G 20040406011638490 17 25 0717539-093676 18 R 19460 88 078A 2701 G 20040406015527650 17 25 0841159-115633 18 R 19460 88 078A 2701 G 20040406015556010 17 25 0839209-045207 28 R 19460 88 078A 2701 G 20040406015606400 17 25 0838208-015213 37 R 28095 03 054A 2701 G 20040406024438380 17 25 0550581+142081 57 S 28097 03 054C 2701 G 20040406024446010 17 25 0552065+142486 47 S 28097 03 054C 2701 G 20040406024516990 17 25 0613045+102234 18 S 28095 03 054A 2701 G 20040406024540430 17 25 0632097+060134 97 S 06787 73 054A 2701 G 20040406031719000 28 25 0445476+295972 68 H+000 10 24680 96 072A 2701 G 20040406031834020 17 25 0448602+292018 18 S 25744 99 028A 2701 G 20040406034825430 17 25 0737638+051146 87 R 25744 99 028A 2701 G 20040406035412550 17 25 0806492+322518 77 R 25744 99 028A 2701 G 20040406035430280 17 25 0808293+340203 56 R 21808 91 076D 2701 G 20040406095324490 17 25 1219475+260037 97 S 21808 91 076D 2701 G 20040406095540860 17 25 1121954+570500 27 S While waiting for 96072A, I observed a single, brief, magnitude zero flash from DMSP B5C-07 (73054A / 6787), near the position reported above. The object did not flash again during the approximately 10 s before it exited my FOV. In 1998 and 2003, Russell Eberst reported it to flash with a 10 s period. irregular variations over several seconds; other times, it flashed or varied irregularly over periods of 2 to 3 s. Site 2701: 43.68764 N, 79.39243 W, 230 m Ted Molczan ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Frequently Asked Questions, SeeSat-L archive: http://www.satobs.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Apr 06 2004 - 06:58:25 EDT