Thanks Tony for sending the list. After reading it I agree with you that it were Quandrantids. But one, the brightest was definately not. It moved towards Bootis from the direction of Gemini. It could have been an Anthelion. When looking at Brams obs this morning I noticed we both observed 01-23 B and almost simustanously. My obs ended about 1.25 period before Bram. 01- 23 B 04-01-03 04:47:09 LB 143.3 0.5 4 35.8 AA, 4->6 01- 23 B 04-01-03 04:47:46.2 BD 140.7 1 4 35.2 R, 4.5->7.5 We live about 200 km apart. Greetings and clear, dark skies Leo Barhorst, Medemblik NL Cospar 4252 52.76350 N 5.09114 E 2 m ASL http://www.home.zonnet.nl/leobarhorst/index.html ----- Original Message ----- From: "Tony Beresford" <dberesford@adam.com.au> To: "Leo Barhorst" <leobarhorst@zonnet.nl>; <seesat-l@satobs.org> Sent: Saturday, January 03, 2004 9:20 AM Subject: Re: Obs Jan 3 morning > At 16:38 3/01/04, Leo Barhorst wrote: > >Before clouds moved in I could observe some sats. > >Cold, freezing, no wind. > >Saw several meteorids, presumably Geminids > > If its shower meteors you are thinking about Leo, > the Quadrantids is a better choice. The radiant > is in Northern Bootes. Weekly summary ( courtesy Bob Lunsford) > by private e-mail > Tony Beresford > > > ----------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from SeeSat-L, send a message with 'unsubscribe' > in the SUBJECT to SeeSat-L-request@satobs.org > List archived at http://www.satobs.org/seesat/seesatindex.html ----------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from SeeSat-L, send a message with 'unsubscribe' in the SUBJECT to SeeSat-L-request@satobs.org List archived at http://www.satobs.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
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