March 19, 2001 11252 79 005B 8936 G 20010319005614330 57 25 0743198+242343 38 S+030 05 22233 92 079C 8936 G 20010319010300000 28 25 0644834+111390 58 S+030 05 05143 71 031B 8936 G 20010319013104700 57 25 0603134+461946 58 S+030 05 UNID 71 031B 8936 G 20010319013720580 57 25 1008374+114953 38 S+050 05 25017 97 064A 8936 G 20010319021457530 57 25 0526509+283439 38 S+030 05 While waiting for 22233 about a minute before prediction and viewing naked eye a very fast object came flashing by, definitely a decayer, quite possibly 22233 and if so it was a minute early and two degrees east of the predicted pass using: GPS 2-16 r2 3.0 1.5 0.0 6.5 d 3.1 872 x 150 km 1 22233U 92079C 01077.50305413 .04551554 12855-5 13056-2 0 7984 2 22233 34.4906 13.0107 0524164 65.8790 299.5736 15.18233155208239 I could not find anything else in an alldat search to match the observation.Nor, could I find a match for UNID1, this object passed just below Alpha Leo as noted. Finally, just as 25017 became visible an interesting meteor passed overhead around 70 elev. in the south moving from east to west, it was visible for several secs and covered a lot of arc in its pass with a yellowish tint to the observed light and very slight trail, call it around 01:37 UT. Clear and Dark Skies----------------------------------------------------------------- Jim Nix | Raleigh Springs #8936 35.2131N 89.9354W 90m | Lim Mag 7.0, Partly Cloudy, Sat-tracks.com ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- 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 : Sun Mar 18 2001 - 18:49:37 PST