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We
found
16 flybys over your area in the next 10 days. |
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Location: Delfzijl, Groninge |
Latitude: 53.3 |
Longitude: 6.9 |
All times displayed are local.
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Satellite |
Rise time |
Direction to look |
Transit time |
Max elevation |
Magnitude |
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ISS |
04:44:50 am |
SSW |
04:47:18 |
29° |
-2.2 (very bright) |
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Satellite |
Rise time |
Direction to look |
Transit time |
Max elevation |
Magnitude |
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XSS-11 |
04:19:35 am |
N |
04:22:51 |
68° |
4.2 (dim) |
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Satellite |
Rise time |
Direction to look |
Transit time |
Max elevation |
Magnitude |
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ISS |
04:43:28 am |
WSW |
04:46:42 |
46° |
-3.2 (very bright) |
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Satellite |
Rise time |
Direction to look |
Transit time |
Max elevation |
Magnitude |
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ISS |
03:55:15 am |
SSW |
03:58:21 |
36° |
-2.7 (very bright) |
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Satellite |
Rise time |
Direction to look |
Transit time |
Max elevation |
Magnitude |
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ISS |
03:07:54 am |
S |
03:10:18 |
28° |
-2.1 (very bright) |
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ISS |
04:42:15 am |
WSW |
04:45:34 |
62° |
-3.7 (very bright) |
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Satellite |
Rise time |
Direction to look |
Transit time |
Max elevation |
Magnitude |
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ISS |
03:53:26 am |
WSW |
03:56:43 |
54° |
-3.5 (very bright) |
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XSS-11 |
04:06:19 am |
NNE |
04:09:26 |
82° |
4.0 (dim) |
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Satellite |
Rise time |
Direction to look |
Transit time |
Max elevation |
Magnitude |
| |
ISS |
03:05:47 am |
WSW |
03:08:59 |
44° |
-3.1 (very bright) |
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ISS |
04:41:03 am |
W |
04:44:23 |
67° |
-3.8 (very bright) |
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Cool links
Simple Satelllite Tracking
| There are hundreds of spacecraft in
Earth orbit and most are visible from your back yard--if you know
when to look. We cut through the confusion by narrowing the list to
a handful of the brightest and most interesting. At the moment we're
monitoring the Lacrosse 3 spy satellite, the International Space Station,
the Early Ammonia Servicer and NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. Check
your flyby times and enjoy the show! Feedback
is welcomed. |
--Signed, Dr. Tony Phillips
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ISS over Dallas, Texas
April 13, 2008 |
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"It is amazing how bright the
ISS is," says photographer Bret Dahl. "I took this picture through
my 10-inch Meade
LX-200." |
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ISS over Kent, England
April 4, 2008 |
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The ISS was so bright, I could
see it moving in and out of the clouds," says photographer Dave Smith.
"I took this picture using a Canon
Powershot A540, wide zoom at 800 ASA for 15 seconds.. |
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A solar wind stream hit Earth on
April 23rd causing geomagnetic storms and Northern Lights around the Arctic
Circle. See also March 2008. This is Aurora Australis backlighting the South
Pole Telescope (a cosmic microwave background telescope, http://spt.uchicago.edu)
which is bathed in moonlight at the geographic South Pole, where the sun
has set for 6 months. J. Dana Hrubes Winterover, South Pole Telescope; Station
Science Leader; Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, Antarctica Tonight, with
a group of young teenagers from south, we went to see the northern lights.
Because of the clouds, the night was very short. Photo details: Canon EOS
30D, 10mm, f3,5, 800 ISO, 15 sec. I went out to try out my new equatorial
mount this evening and found out that there were green lights out there.
Photo details: Pentax K10D, K20D, 20mm, 24mm The nordic sky is gradually
getting brighter and brighter as we approach summer. However, it still gets
sufficient dark at midnight (62nd Lat.N). I got out just after midnight
(April 23/24, 2008) local time, and shot a few images of the auroras. Here
are a couple. Photo details: Canon EOS 450D, 18-55 mm lens, ISO: 800, exp:
60 - 65 sec, tripod, RC-5. This was taken looking over the Athabasca river
in Fort McMurray Alberta with Syncrude Canada in the background. |