Ed Cannon wrote: One of them, Cosmos 2327 Rk (96-004B, 23774) was tumbling very nicely with a period of about 8.5 seconds. This seems to be significantly different from the online PPAS recent observations data, which are from 1999. Here's a PPAS format report: 96- 4 B 00-07-11 04:39:39 EC 161.4 0.5 19 8.50 This is in good agreement of my obs this year; see the PPAS entries below. Some of the obs are double period. 96- 4 B 00-01-08 18:20:03 LB 109.9 0.5 15 7.33 AA, 4->i 96- 4 B 00-01-09 05:09:47 LB 150.9 0.5 10 15.1 AA, 4->8 96- 4 B 00-01-09 18:46:24 LB 178.1 0.5 24 7.42 AA, 4->i 96- 4 B 00-04-01 20:29:24 LB 109.2 0.5 6 18.2 AA, 4->7 96- 4 B 00-04-07 19:37:43 LB 73.3 0.5 5 14.7 AA, 4->i 96- 4 B 00-06-02 01:43:22 LB 70.5 0.5 10 7.1 AA, 4->i 96- 4 B 00-06-16 23:30 LB S, 4 96- 4 B 00-06-30 22:40:50 LB 88.2 0.5 11 8.01 AA, 4->i Greetings and clear, dark skies Leo Barhorst 52.767 N 5.09 E 2 m ASL ----------------------------------------------------------------- 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
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