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I am sure that the astronauts were not looking out of the windows of the ISS as they went by last night. I've translated enough Form 24's to know that there are only certain times of the day when there is "nothing" to do ("nothing" in the sense of "now you can 'turn to' and take care of the million little things that aren't on the schedule, including talking on the ham radio and looking out the window"), and those times don't come around too often... certainly not on a weekday.

But from our vantage point on the ground (we being Drew and I), we were outside and looking up at a moon that's somewhere between half and three-quarters, and a sky so clear that the moonlight was illuminating the contrails of high-flying aircraft.

The ISS made its appearance on schedule - I'd say within 20 seconds of the time calculated on my Palm, and we caught it in the southwest sky as it was rising. It was a pretty dull point of light initially, but as it passed nearly overhead, it was a very bright spot, indeed. As it moved toward the north-northeast, Drew noticed another satellite moving roughly south-to-north on a path that, from our perspective, would cross the ISS somewhat behind the station.

I have no idea what the other satellite was, nor did any of the folks at this morning's ham breakfast (ham, as in amateur radio). I ordered the pancakes this morning as opposed to my usual feast of eggs with onions and peppers on top of fried potatoes (the local eatery's "Pagosa Sunrise" platter), and remembered - afterward - just why I really don't like pancakes... I find them to be cloyingly sweet when slathered in syrup, and about as edible as wet cotton if left alone. No matter, I wasn't there for the fare... the other folks around the table were the thing, and it's always interesting to hear what they have to say.

Galina wants to go to Albuquerque this afternoon, which means we'll probably spend the night there, as it takes about 4 hours to get there and what we have to do (visit a supplier and a mega-hardware store like Home Depot) will probably take until after 9 pm. We'll see... she's not home from the shop yet, and if we're going to go, it will have to be soon.

Gotta go do some research.

Cheers...

Date: 2001-06-01 11:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bandicoot.livejournal.com
I think I have a site in my bookmarks that would tell me when to look. I've never seen ISS, but I did see Mir a number of times, and it showed up very brightly.

Date: 2001-06-02 10:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexpgp.livejournal.com
One of the fellas at the ham breakfast mentioned a site where you can register with your coordinates and get updates, but I missed the name.

I think half the fun of figuring out where to look is having to go to the effort of figuring out where to look.

Now, if I could figure out how to go the other way... feed in approximate info about a satellite that was seen and get output in the form of what that satellite was, that would be cool. But there are so many of them.

Cheers...

Re:

Date: 2001-06-02 10:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bandicoot.livejournal.com
The one I have is J-Pass (http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/RealTime/JPass/20/). You can put in your location and get a display. You can also go backwards and put in the location and the time you saw something and get that display.

Of course it still has Mir, so I'm not sure how dependable it is ;)

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