I think I had a good sun-satellite-observer angle and imaged it at the right spot. The sat was at an elevation of 27 degrees and azimuth 98 degrees. Predicted standard magnitude 9.5 Regards Leo 2016-02-13 11:35 GMT+01:00 Marco Langbroek via Seesat-l <seesat-l_at_satobs.org >: > > 41334 16 010A 4353 F 20160213052612250 17 75 1616549+311940 56 S > 41334 16 010A 4353 F 20160213052622250 17 75 1601319+296060 56 S > 41334 16 010A 4353 F 20160213052632250 17 75 1546448+279100 56 S > 41334 16 010A 4353 F 20160213052642250 17 75 1532408+261380 56 S > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Canon EOS 60D + Samyang 1.4/85mm, 800 ISO + ASTRORECORD astrometric > software. > What these numbers mean: http://www.satobs.org/position/IODformat.html > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > > Some very thin cirrus in the sky, but stars and satellite trails stand out > well on the images. > > FIA R4 was some 6.6s late with regard to Cees' elset 16042.18947616 > > The satellite is still fainter than FIA Radar's normally are. The > brightening that Leo reported on this same pass but 4 minutes earlier must > have been a temporary effect. > > - Marco > > > ----- > Dr Marco Langbroek - SatTrackCam Leiden, the Netherlands. > e-mail: sattrackcam_at_langbroek.org > > Cospar 4353 (Leiden): 52.15412 N, 4.49081 E (WGS84), +0 m ASL > Cospar 4354 (De Wilck): 52.11685 N, 4.56016 E (WGS84), -2 m ASL > Cospar 4355 (Cronesteyn): 52.13878 N, 4.49937 E (WGS84), -2 m ASL > Station (b)log: http://sattrackcam.blogspot.com > Twitter: _at_Marco_Langbroek > PGP key: http://tinyurl.com/kur7xm8 > ----- > _______________________________________________ > Seesat-l mailing list > http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-l > _______________________________________________ Seesat-l mailing list http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-lReceived on Sat Feb 13 2016 - 05:02:33 UTC
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