Just observed the 6:26 UT pass. Separation of 1/8 degree with bright yellow ISS leading the orbiter (2 mag dimmer and white). Could just make out the separation naked eye at the zenith. Steve Bolton Lat 45.432 Long 65.976 W -----Original Message----- From: Tony Beresford [mailto:aberesford@iprimus.com.au] Sent: July 22, 2001 1:53 AM To: Edward S Light; SeeSat-L@blackadder.lmsal.com Subject: Re: STS-104 and ISS question At 09:59 22/07/01 , Edward S Light wrote: >Dear List members > >The shuttle is scheduled to undock from ISS at 04:54 UTC (22 July), >and there is a pass visible from here about 1.5 hours later. Does >anyone know how far apart the two might be at that time? At a >range of almost 600 km, might they be visible as separate objects >in, say, 10x50 binoculars? Ed, During the hour long flyaround Up to 05:54 utthe 150meter separation at 600Km corresponds to about 1 arc minute, just separable in 10x50s, I think they back of to 20Km by your sighting time, and then the angular sep. would be 2 degrees, Which is of course easy naked eye. Tony Beresford ----------------------------------------------------------------- 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 ----------------------------------------------------------------- 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 : Sat Jul 21 2001 - 23:38:03 PDT