While waiting for 90080, saw 77-41B at 18000 mile range, flashing PPAS later. Thought it was new to me, and a bright UNID that passed through field was a normal LEO. It was 79-24B which I had not seen before! Also, do not know what the deal is with 23893 running >20s late - I know it was near a 5th mag star as shown here, but cannot get other, very detailed telescopic results to reduce. Will try again and report what I can. 90080 08 591A 8335 G 20080503023931370 17 25 1243931+093848 57 S 90080 08 591A 8335 G 20080503023937590 17 25 1244621+100243 57 S 14180 83 056G 8335 G 20080503025424460 17 25 1103256+402432 67 S 14180 83 056G 8335 G 20080503025438380 17 25 1132649+484076 28 S 14180 83 056G 8335 G 20080503025447230 27 25 1155348+532367 28 S 24680 96 072A 8335 G 20080503030707130 17 25 1025877+671423 28 S 24680 96 072A 8335 G 20080503030714850 27 25 0950530+723452 48 S 24680 96 072A 8335 G 20080503030718100 17 25 0934929+741553 97 S 24680 96 072A 8335 G 20080503030719350 17 25 0926388+750317 18 S 24680 96 072A 8335 G 20080503030802750 17 25 0318675+775098 28 S 23893 96 029A 8335 G 20080503032155210 17 25 1237360-074900 58 S Brad Young TULSA 2 COSPAR 8335 35.8311N, 96.1411W, 335m ASL ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Frequently Asked Questions, SeeSat-L archive: http://www.satobs.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
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