This is some what interesting. Unless there as been a sudden and significant change in Cd or atmosphere, and there is new RADAR data to confirm (which of course we haven't got yet), I can't see that it will be coming down that early? (I didn't think they had that big powerful laser yet :-) Thoughts? Paul Salanitri On Sun, Oct 23, 2011 at 7:11 AM, satrack@libero.it <satrack@libero.it>wrote: > USSTRATCOM new TIP: > > 02:31:00 GMT +/- 3 Hours > descending, 14.4° N, 245° E > > Simone > > >----Messaggio originale---- > >Da: satrack@libero.it > >Data: 22-ott-2011 22.50 > >A: <seesat-l@satobs.org> > >Ogg: R: Decay Forecast ROSAT > > > >DLR decreased the uncertainty to 3 hours in the last prediction: > > > >Reentry 2:15 UTC +- 3 hours. > > > >I've included this source with the related ground tracks in my page: > > > > > http://digilander.libero.it/SATrack/VisualSATFlareTrackerOnline.html?q=20638 > > > >Simone > >_______________________________________________ > >Seesat-l mailing list > >http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-l > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Seesat-l mailing list > http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-l > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/private/seesat-l/attachments/20111023/ebc9032c/attachment.html _______________________________________________ Seesat-l mailing list http://mailman.satobs.org/mailman/listinfo/seesat-l
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