Due to a easterly wind with drier air, the fog stayed away. Having a day off from work I could observe this morning. Mars was shining brilliant orange high in the west and Saturn in the east. The URL explaning the numbers : http://www.satobs.org/tumble/flashpm.html#PPASformat 02- 37 D 05-10-11 03:21 LB S, 6 02- 58 F 05-10-11 03:43 LB S, 5 04- 28 B 05-10-11 02:51:56 LB 239.3 1.0 3 79.8 MM, 4->i Timings: 81.41 79.24 78.65 sec. 04- 46 B 05-10-11 04:35 LB slowly var, 4->5 69- 09 A 05-10-11 02:35:33 LB 224.2 0.2 16 14.01 Fff-F, 3(5)->i, N? Timings: 83.21 13.98 14.10 14.75 14.51 56.30 13.54 13.81 sec. Several maxima were not seen or too faint to time. 72- 89 A 05-10-11 03:39:05 LB 131.4 0.5 6 21.9 AA, 4->7 Timings: 20.99 21.51 21.59 21.69 45.64 sec. 82- 72 A 05-10-11 03:54 LB S, 5 86- 61 A 05-10-11 04:27:19 LB 21.7 0.2 11 1.97 'Fff-'F, 4(5)->i Timings: 1.95 1.85 2.11 1.96 1.91 2.35 1.89 1.86 1.96 2.01 1.81 sec. 87- 60 A 05-10-11 03:24:22 LB 101.6 0.5 9 11.3 AA, 4->i Timings: 10.64 11.53 11.31 11.61 11.24 11.70 10.75 11.60 11.21 sec. 90- 50 C 05-10-11 04:24 LB S, 5, with D and E While waiting for another sat I saw this NOSS trio. 2005: 734 obs PPAS: 14325 obs Greetings and clear, dark skies Leo Barhorst, Medemblik NL Cospar 4252 52.76350 N 5.09114 E 2 m ASL http://www.home.versatel.nl/leobarhorst/index.html ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Frequently Asked Questions, SeeSat-L archive: http://www.satobs.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Oct 11 2005 - 05:58:00 EDT