Beautiful for a while, zodiacal light, several galaxies seen. Once I moved to satellites, it clouded up. 22988 94 009A 8335 F 20160207021836310 57 25 0912772+050721 28 S+110 10 22988 94 009A 8335 F 20160207021910890 57 25 0913301+051630 27 S 22988 94 009A 8335 F 20160207022020590 57 25 0914537+050887 28 S 11436 79 053C 8335 F 20160207030540760 57 25 0846992+015286 37 +130 10 11436 79 053C 8335 F 20160207030608570 57 25 0847459+015107 47 11436 79 053C 8335 F 20160207030708520 57 25 0848416+014788 77 11436 79 053C 8335 F 20160207030752550 57 25 0849167+014622 18 FPAS12,22314,R8335A,20160207,023005,1s,-,35.8,-96.1,330,LUTF,Gkk,k,60s,8,k,G1CkNNN,N,-,-,-,-,-,-,-; FPAS12,20391,R8335B,20160207,031315,1s,-,35.8,-96.1,330,FUTF,Gkk,k,90s,11,12,G1CkNNT,N,-,-,-,180.0 20. 002 180 M,-,-,-; Brad Young Bright:20 x 80 Celestron binoculars parallelogram tripod Dim:22" f/4.2 UC Obsession _at_ 100x Numbers above and methods explained at: http://www.satobs.org/seesat/Jan-2015/0074.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 Feb 07 2016 - 00:28:32 UTC
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