Allen Not sure how far Havana is from the landing point, I am guessing it would be about 175,000ft. here is a table you can use to figure it out. It is pretty much the same for all missions. Dale Ireland VR is Mach number, Alpha is angle of attack, R is range in nautical miles, H is altitude in Kfeet, Href if reference altitude rate (read H-dot, there should be a dot above the H) in feet/sec, Rref is reference roll angle in degrees. view the table in Courier New font to maintain formatting VR Alpha R H Href Rref 24.5 40 4088 400 24 40 2660 250 -45 R85 23 40 2200 245 -61 74 22 40 1825 240 -80 67 21 40 1540 230 -100 64 20 40 1310 225 -119 62 19 40 1130 220 -138 61 18 40 980 210 -161 62 17 40 860 205 -177 62 16 40 760 200 -188 63 15 40 680 190 -202 64 14 HI 40 LO 650 185 -127 62 13 43 40 37 540 180 -137 60 12 43 40 37 475 175 -155 58 11 42 39 36 420 170 -196 L55 10 41 39 35 370 168 -176 45 9 39 37 33 320 161 -209 41 8 36 35 30 270 153 -242 39 7 33 32 27 229 143 -271 38 6 29 28 23 184 132 -274 39 5 26 24 20 141 122 -272 R38 4 22 20 17 105 107 -264 40 3 18 16 14 74 90 -249 39 2.5 13 61 83 -247 2 12 49 78 1.5 37 66 1 28 52 Dale > -----Original Message----- > From: Allen Thomson [mailto:thomsona@flash.net] > > I notice that the revolution 200 landing track into KSC > (http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/groundtracs/index.html) > crosses Cuba near Pinar del Rio, a bit west of Havana. Does anyone > here happen to know the Shuttle's altitude during that part of the descent? ----------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe from SeeSat-L by sending a message with 'unsubscribe' in the SUBJECT to SeeSat-L-request@lists.satellite.eu.org http://www2.satellite.eu.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Feb 20 2001 - 07:14:41 PST