T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
360.1 | wh {{{ | IMGAWN::BIRO | | Thu Oct 22 1987 11:29 | 8 |
| has any one tried it, I have a lot of trouble with line noise
or something like that, keep geting {{{{ thrown in at random
times (1200 baud) , when I can get in it is a very nice
service, he must update the list several times a week and he
is on the 30 day special list
jb
|
360.2 | NSS offers computer satellite tracking service | DICKNS::KLAES | I'm with Digital. We don't lie. | Fri Nov 20 1987 08:43 | 33 |
| From: weltyc@nysernic (Christopher A. Welty)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Re: Satellite Orbits
Date: 20 Nov 87 01:41:14 GMT
Organization: RPI Computer Science Dept.
In article <[email protected]> [email protected] writes:
> There should be programs out there to convert orbital parameters
>(such as for MIR) into sets of predictions for a given site (such as Stanford)
The NSS provides such a program for PCs to its local chapters.
Check out the NSS local chapter near you. I don't know exactly where
Stanford is in CA, but the local NSS chapters in California are:
Chico L5: (916) 877-4612 [Paradise]
Contra Costa/Alemeda L5: (415) 530-1971 [Oakland]
Exocalifornia L5: (408) 667-2413 [Big Sur]
Lockheed L5: (408) 778-5097 [Lockheed, Morgan Hill]
Oasis L5: (213) 374-1381 [Redondo Beach]
Sacramento L5: (916) 338-5393 [Sacramento]
San Diego L5: (619) 588-2304 [San Diego]
San Joaquin L5: (209) 453-1600 [Fresno]
Santa Cruz L5: (408) 425-7151 [Santa Cruz]
Silicon Valley L5: (408) 729-9555 [Santa Clara]
You shouldn't have to be an NSS member or a chapter member to get
the program, but if you're not you'll probably have to supply your own
disk.
Christopher Welty --- Asst. Director, RPI CS Labs
[email protected] ...!rutgers!nysernic!weltyc
|
360.3 | Observed satellite magnitudes from 1990-1992 | VERGA::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Feb 14 1992 14:14 | 162 |
| Article: 20330
From: [email protected] (Bruce Watson)
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.astro
Subject: Stellar magnitudes of satellites
Date: 13 Feb 92 23:56:05 GMT
Organization: Alpha Science Computer Network, Denver, Co.
Artifical Earth Satelites Observed from Denver, CO
from Jan 1, 1990 to Feb 12, 1992
Typ Max
Max Vis Number
Magn Magn Satellite Times obs'd Remarks
---- ---- --------- ----------- -------
0 -1 Mir Complex 25 Largest orbiting object
+2 +1 Lacrosse 1 11 Radar recon
+3 -2 Seasat 9 Inactive
+2.5 +2 Cosmos 1980 r/b 8 Zenit rocket body
+2.5 +2 Cosmos 1697 R/B 8 Zenit rocket body
+2 +1 KH-11-8 7
+2.5 +2 Cosmos 2082 r/b 7 Zenit rocket body
+2.5 +2 Cosmos 1844 r/b 7 Zenit rocket body
+3 +1 CoBE 6 Varies due to rotation
+1 0 Gamma 5
+3 +2 Cosmos 1484 r/b 5
+1 0 Salyut 7 4 no longer in orbit
+3# 0 HST 4 Now 2nd largest object
+2 +2 Delta Star 4
+2.5 +2 Cosmos 1943 r/b 4 Zenit rocket body
+2 +2 KH-11-6 3
+3 +2 Cosmos 184 r/b 3
+2 0 Landsat 4 2
+4 +4 IRAS 2
+2 +2 Cosmos 925 2
+2 +2 Cosmos 2122 2
+2 +2 Cosmos 2121 ? 2
+3 +3 Cosmos 2120 ? 2
+3 +3 Cosmos 2108 ? 2
+2 +1 Cosmos 2051 2
+2 +2 Cosmos 2046 2
+2 +2 Cosmos 1949 2
+2.5 +3 Cosmos 1833 r/b ? 2 Zenit rocket body
+3 0 Cosmos 1689 2
+3 +3 Cosmos 156 r/b 2
* +3 Cosmos 2138 ? /2124 ? 1
* +1 UARS 1
* +2 Tiros N? 1
* +4 Timation 2 r/b 1
* -2 Shuttle (STS-42) 1 Second largest object
* +2 ROSAT r/b 1 when orbiting
* +3 Okean 1 ? 1
* +2 OAO 1 1
* +4 NOSS 4 SSB/SSC ? 1
* +2 Meteor 2-18 1
* +3 Meteor 2-17 r/b ? 1
* +3 Meteor 1-7 r/b 1
* +2 Meteor 1-29 r/b 1
* +2 Meteor 1-2 r/b 1
* +2 Mao 1 r ? 1
* +2 Lacrosse 2 1
* 0 Lacrosse 2 r/b 1
* +3 IRAS r/b ? 1
* +4 Int Cos 19 r/b ? 1
* +3 In-Cosmos 24 r/b 1
* +3 ERBS 1
* +1 Cosmos 980 r/b 1
* +2 Cosmos 842 ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 808 r/b 1
* +1 Cosmos 807 r/b ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 756 r 1
* +2 Cosmos 744 r/b 1
* +3 Cosmos 660 1
* +3 Cosmos 405 r/b ? 1
* +4 Cosmos 371 r/b 1
* +2 Cosmos 2149 ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 2138 ? 1
* +2 Cosmos 2136 ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 2134 ? 1
* +2 Cosmos 2107 1
* +4 Cosmos 2103 1
* +3 Cosmos 2096 1
* +3 Cosmos 2075 r/b ? 1
* +4 Cosmos 2074 r/b ? 1
* +2 Cosmos 2061 r/b ? 1
* +2 Cosmos 2060 1
* +3 Cosmos 206 r/b ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 2058 r/b 1
* +3 Cosmos 2058 1
* +4 Cosmos 2053 r/b ? 1
* +2 Cosmos 2033 1
* +4 Cosmos 2016 ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 1892 1
* +4 Cosmos 1869 1
* +4 Cosmos 1862 1
* +3 Cosmos 185 r/b ? 1
* +2 Cosmos 1844 ? 1
* +5 Cosmos 1833 ? 1
* +4 Cosmos 1766 1
* +3 Cosmos 1689 r/b 1
* 0 Cosmos 1674 r/b ? 1
* +4 Cosmos 1602 ? 1
* +4 Cosmos 1536 ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 1484 r/b 1
* +3 Cosmos 1461 ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 1400 r/b 1
* +3 Cosmos 1340 1
* +2 Cosmos 1271 1
* +3 Cosmos 1242 r/b 1
* +2 Cosmos 1238 r/b 1
* +4 Cosmos 1222 ? 1
* +2 Cosmos 1220 1
* +3 Cosmos 1184 r/b 1
* +3 Cosmos 1154 1
* +2 Cosmos 1145 ? 1
* +4 Cosmos 1093 ? 1
* +2 Cosmos 1063 r ? 1
* +3 Cosmos 1043r/C1850r? 1
* +2 Cosmos 1005 1
* +3 Cosmos 100 r/b ? 1
* +4 COS-B r/b 1
* -1 Copernicus 1
* +1 Aureole 1 r/b ? 1
* +3 Auerole 2 r/b ? 1
* -1 Almaz 1 1
* +3 Cosmos 1953 r 1
The observing method, generally, was to observe as much of the sky as
possible from the end of nautical twilight (sun at -12) for about an
hour (1.5 hours in summer) with a concentration toward the zenith to
about +45 altitude in the east without looking for specific objects
during the observation period with identification afterwards.
Typ Max Magn - is the maximum visual magnitude the satellite under
best conditions for phase and minimum distance to observer.
(*) indicates that since the satellite was observed once, typical
max magnitude cannot be determined.
(#) since Hubble is in a 28.5 degree orbit it is always low on the
southern horizon from +39.6 latitude and would be brighter at
lower latitudes.
Max Vis Magn - is the maximum visual magnitude the satellite appeared
during any of its apparitions. It is typically a temporary sudden
increase to the magnitude indicated.
Number times obs'd - is a function of the satellites brightness and
its period of visibility which is a function of time in orbit (note
that the Shuttle has been observed once during the period) and
inclination which determines how long it remains in (and returns to)
the twilight window.
The question mark (?) after the satellite name indicates that the
identification of the object is preliminary.
Bruce Watson
Denver, CO.
--
_________________________________________________________________
| Bruce Watson (wats@scicom) | No bucks, no Buck Rogers |
_________________________________________________________________
|
360.4 | Anyone have any sw online? | DRIFT::WOOD | Laughter is the best medicine | Wed Mar 25 1992 06:43 | 11 |
| Does anyone have a copy of any satellite tracking software online,
either for VMS or PCs? I know I could download it from a BBS
somewhere, but the last time I tried that they only supported X-Modem
and I only use Kermit.
With the latest shuttle in a high inclination orbit, it's time to go
looking...
Thanks,
John
|
360.5 | Tracking the COSMOS 2082 booster | VERGA::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Wed Apr 15 1992 11:25 | 34 |
| Article: 43156
From: [email protected] (Bruce Watson)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Satellite of the Month - COSMOS 2082 rocket
Date: 13 Apr 92 17:52:58 GMT
Organization: Alpha Science Computer Network, Denver, Co.
The upper stage of the rocket used to launch COSMOS 2082 is currently
visible to observers of the mid latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere
during the early evening hours. COSMOS 2082, probably an electronic
intelligence satellite, was launched from Tyuratam on 1990 May 22.22
UT. The rocket body (NORAD No. 20625, int'l des 1990-046B) is in an
orbit of inclination 71 degrees, height above Earth of about 850 km,
with a period of 101.9 minutes. It is the last stage of the CIS ZENIT
(ZENITH) Type J or SL-16 intermediate payload launch system. What
remains in orbit is roughly a cylinder of diameter 3.9 meters and
length 10.4 meters. There are 6 such rocket bodies in similar orbits.
Due to subsequent problems this is the last ZENIT to be launched.
In July 1990, I observed COSMOS 2082 r/b varying in brightness with a
maximum of +2.5 magnitude. In September 1990 it appeared to be steady
in brightness; however the following November it varied with a period
of one second. In January of 1991 the period had lengthened to 1.2
seconds. Currently the period is 13 seconds. The previous 5 ZENITH
rocket bodies acted similarly. The variability is caused by the
tumbling of the cylinder. Eventually the long axis will point to
Earth and the variability will cease.
COSMOS 2082 r 10.4 3.9 0.0 4.6
1 20625U 90046 B 92 78.31206941 .00000565 00000-0 29911-3 0 3092
2 20625 70.9888 49.4186 0012824 68.4651 291.7800 14.13581569 94122
--
Bruce Watson (wats@scicom) nuqneH tlhlngan Hol Dajath'a'Do'Ha' blmoHqu
|
360.6 | Tracking COSMOS 1220 | VERGA::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Aug 28 1992 12:31 | 32 |
| Article: 25793
From: [email protected] (Bruce Watson)
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.astro
Subject: Satellite of the Month
Date: 22 Aug 92 19:53:16 GMT
Organization: Alpha Science Computer Network, Denver, Co.
Earth Satellite Cosmos 1220 (NORAD #12054, COSPAR 1980-089A) was
launched from the (then) USSR from Tyuratam (Baikonur) on 1980 Nov 4
with a SL-11 (F-1-m) launch vehicle. This satellite is in an orbit
inclined to Earth's equator by 65.0 degrees. It makes one revolution
every 97.8 minutes and comes to within 552 km of Earth's surface and
is most distant at 751 km. Its brightness is similar to a sphere of
6.0m diameter.
Cosmos 1220 is thought to be an military electronic intelligence ocean
surveillance satellite. It is one of three similiar satellites. The
others are Cosmos 2096 and Cosmos 2122. In June of 1982 Cosmos 1220
exploded into 80 pieces. The elements below are for the largest
fragment. It is beginning a sequence of evening passes for North
American observers.
I have observed Cosmos 1220 from Denver once the last three summers at
magnitude +2, but it has been observed by others to flash to zero
magnitude.
Cosmos 1220 6.0 0.0 0.0 4.5
1 12054U 80089 A 92217.72121940 .00000921 00000-0 12141-3 0 1192
2 12054 64.9963 343.0911 0141730 59.8679 301.6396 14.73087339547258
--
Bruce Watson (wats@scicom) Tumbra, Zorkovick; Sparkula zoom krackadomando.
|
360.7 | COSMOS 2237 | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Tue Jun 15 1993 14:17 | 33 |
| Article: 37526
From: [email protected] (Bruce Watson)
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.astro
Subject: Satellite of the Month - June 1993
Date: 12 Jun 93 20:33:10 GMT
Organization: Alpha Science Computer Network, Denver, Co.
The upper stage of the rocket used to launch Cosmos 2237 is currently
visible to observers of the mid latitudes of the northern hemisphere
during evening twilight. Cosmos 2237, probably an electronic
intelligence satellite, was launched from Tyuratam on 1993 Mar 26 UTC.
The rocket body (NORAD no. 22566, int'l des 1993-016B) is in an orbit
of inclination 71 degrees, height above the earth of about 850 km,
with a period of 101.8 minutes. It is the last stage of the CIS Zenit
(Zenith) Type J or SL-16 intermediate payload launch system. What
remains in orbit is roughly a cylinder of diameter 3.9 m and length
10.4 meters. There are 9 such rocket bodies in similar orbits. This is
the second launch of the Zenit rocket since problems with the vehicle
in 1990.
I first observed Cosmos 2237 on 1993 Jun 12 at 7:10 UTC at
approximately magnitude +2.5 flashing with a period of about four
flashes per second. As with previous Zenit last stages the flash
period should slow over the coming months and years until the cylinder
assumes a gravity gradient attitude with the long axis pointing toward
Earth.
Cosmos 2237 r 10.4 3.9 0.0 4.6
1 22566U 93016 B 93109.28953264 -.00000276 00000-0 -14525-3 0 270
2 22566 71.0114 214.7933 0012559 237.7374 122.2530 14.13853489 3421
--
Bruce Watson ([email protected])
|
360.8 | The NOSS constellation | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Mon Jul 19 1993 13:47 | 108 |
| Article: 39395
Newsgroups: sci.astro
From: Leigh Palmer <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: A squadron of satellites...
Sender: [email protected]
Organization: Simon Fraser University
Date: Sat, 17 Jul 1993 16:46:12 GMT
In article <[email protected]> Steve South,
[email protected] writes:
>Last night, viewing through 7x50's in my back yard in Los Altos, CA, I saw
>the incredible sight of a squadron of satellites! Well, maybe not a
>squadron, three, anyway.
I like to include observations of some of the brighter artificial
satellites, and also the astronomical satellites, in my astronomy
course student observing sessions. Predicting the apparition of these
little wonders helps heighten the participation of the many students
who cannot be at the eyepiece of a telescope at any given time. (Of
course I won't mention the time that COBE went flashing right through
my zenith and I couldn't tell them what it was, even though I had to
talk about it in my lecture the very next day!)
The ones Steve South saw are my favorite satellites, the NOSS
"constellation". My wife and I sometimes set an alarm clock and run
out into the back yard to observe them on good passes. Having good
binoculars, a clear sky (or at least sucker holes in the right
direction), and a knowledge of the sky all help in doing so. Other
desirable equipment are a radio tuned to WWV and a portable audio
casette recorder for your observations, especially timings.
After that, it is nice to know what it is one is looking at. Ted
Molczan, who runs a bulletin board in Toronto, provides a valuable
service to amateurs who observe or even use satellites. Below I quote
information on the NOSS satellites received by Ted from unidentified
sources and posted to his board. I can not attest to its reliability,
and I pass it on in the spirit of sharing a rumor, though it is not in
any way implausible in my view. What follows is all quotation, but I
will omit the customary ">"s because I don't like them.
Leigh
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Artificial Satellite Orbital Elements in NORAD "2-line" Format.
These elements are provided as a service to visual observers. They
are uploaded weekly to the Canadian Space Society's BBS in Toronto,
Canada. This is a free BBS, operating 24 h/d, <=2400 B, 8N1, phone
416-458-5907.
.... [many kilobytes, including much good stuff, elided] ...
NOSS (Whitecloud) Satellites
----------------------------
One of the more interesting U.S. DoD programs is the secret NOSS
(Naval Ocean Surveillance Satellite), code named Whitecloud, which is
believed to use satellite borne radio interferometry to locate and
track ships at sea by their radio transmissions. NOSS satellites use
a 63.43 deg inclination, 1116 km altitude orbit.
First Generation NOSS
---------------------
The first NOSS launch, probably a technology development mission, was
71110A (5678). The first of eight operational first generation
launches was 76038A (8818); the most recent was 87043A (17997).
The NOSS constellation consists of three orbital planes, each
containing four satellites flying in formation; a main satellite and
three sub-satellites. Seen from the ground, the sub-satellites are
spaced only a few degrees apart.
The satellites are small and usually rather faint, about magnitude 7
or 8, however, they have been observed to frequently brighten
spontaneously to magnitude 2 to 4. One long time observer believes
that they periodically deploy solar sails to provide the propulsion
required to maintain their precise formation flight. One piece of
orbital evidence which may support his theory is that the satellites'
orbits become more eccentric with time. That is a well known
consequence of solar radiation pressure perturbations.
Second Generation NOSS
----------------------
A Titan 4 rocket, launched on 8 June 1990 from Florida, carried four
payloads into orbit, three of which were discovered by Russell Eberst
to belong to a new, apparently second generation, NOSS cluster. The
satellites are about two magnitudes brighter than older NOSS
satellites; also, there appears to be no fourth "main" NOSS satellite.
The new cluster, 90050B-D, is in the same orbit as the eighth first
generation cluster, 87043.
The orbit of the fourth Titan 4 payload, 90050A (20641) is unknown.
Originally, it was in a 61 deg inclination, 455 km altitude orbit, but
it manoeuvred on the night of 19-20 June 1990, and has not been seen since.
It probably deployed the NOSS cluster in its 63.43 deg inclination,
1116 km altitude orbit, before manoeuvring to its final orbit. There
has been some informed speculation by news reporters that 90050A is
mainly an imaging reconsat, and that the NOSS cluster was only a
secondary payload.
- Ted J. Molczan, Toronto,
Canada
|
360.9 | USA-33 | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Tue Aug 10 1993 13:38 | 47 |
| Article: 68983
From: [email protected] (Bruce Watson)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Satellite of the Month
Date: 7 Aug 93 21:13:08 GMT
Organization: Alpha Science Computer Network, Denver, Co.
Earth Satellite USA-33 (NORAD #19625, COSPAR 1988-099A) was launched
from Vandenberg Air Force Base on 1988 Nov 6 with a Titan 34D launch
vehicle. This satellite is in an orbit inclined to the Earth's equator
by 97.9 degrees. It makes one revolution every 97.5 minutes and and
currently comes to within 267 km of the Earth's surface and is most
distant at 1006 km. It is roughly cylindrical with a 3.0 m diameter
and length of 15.0 m--similar in size and shape to the Hubble Space
Telescope. It is thought to be a Keyhole 11 optical surveillance
satellite and is designated KH 11-8 in Ted Molczan's list of 730+
two-line elements.
KH 11-8 is in what is called a "sun-synchronous" orbit. Such an
orbit's nodes (intersections of the orbit plane with the Earth's
equatorial plane) precess, due to the Earth's equatorial bulge, at the
same rate as the Earth's revolution about the Sun. This causes the
satellite to pass over a place on the Earth's surface at approximately
the same local time at that place (a favorable situation for an Earth
resources or surveillance mission). In this orbit it can be seen only
during the summer when the sun's rays shine over the pole. In the
north hemisphere we are now well into summer and KH 11-8 will be
visible for the next month or so. It can be seen around 10:20 pm +/-
50 min (your daylight savings time zone) traveling from SSE to NNW on
its way to the other side of the Earth where it is 10:20 am (or so)
local time.
Unlike KH11-8's older brother KH11-6, KH11-8 still has fuel for
maneuvering and changes its orbit frequently. The orbit change is a
repositioning of the orientation of the ellipse and a lowering of
perigee. Inclination changes little.
I have observed KH11-8 from Denver 12 times the last four summers
mainly at magnitude +2 with a variation of about 1 in visual magnitude
from pass to pass.
KH 11-8 15.0 3.0 0.0 4.6
1 19625U 88099 A 93210.14283180 .00013300 00000-0 13778-3 0 08
2 19625 97.9201 273.3573 0527429 314.1837 45.8162 14.77718520 07
--
Bruce Watson ([email protected])
|
360.10 | Tracking NOSS/White Cloud | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Mon Nov 15 1993 19:02 | 346 |
| Article: 46973
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.astro
Subject: NOSS/Whitecloud observation
Date: 11 Nov 93 06:20:23 PST
Organization: Science Applications Int'l Corp./San Diego
Here is an account of a sighting of one of the famous
NOSS/Whitecloud satellite clusters by Ron Dantowitz of the Hayden
Planetarium in Boston. Ron is new to satellite watching, though not
to astronomy in general, and I thought* his story of stalking,
observing and analyzing the triad would be of interest to
astronetters. This first appeared in the Compuserve astronomy forum,
and is reposted here with Ron's permission.
**********************************************************************
Hello Fellow Satellite Watchers!
For those of you who've been asking questions about the NOSS Triad sats,
here are some of my observations from pass # 614 over Boston, MA on
Monday 8 Nov, 93.
Triad rose in the North, but as I scanned w/ binocs, no luck. After
sats reached their Max elevation of 76 degrees, I was about to give up.
But then... Voila! I found them w/ my 7x50 binocs, as they were
entering the square of Pegasus. It would have been impossible if I
didn't have my notebook computer up on the roof w/ me, showing me the
pass on Traksat's "Star background" option. It's pretty neat to watch
the satellite creep across the computer-screen starfield, and look up to
see the sat gliding right by Alpheratz, poof! Like pulling a rabbit out
of a hat. But sorry, I have digressed... I'm too excited by the idea
of seeing 3 sats flying in formation!
Here are my observations, sans excitement :-|
My binocs were 7x50, with a field of 7.1 degrees diameter. I noticed
that the sats did not form an equilateral triangle, but something like
this: Facing southeast, when the triad was at approx 45 degrees
elevation (in the Square of Pegasus):
. 3
. 2
. 1
\direction
\ of
\ travel
Southeast +
The direction of travel was south, from #2 to #1. Whether this non-
equilateral triangle was due to perspective, or maybe they weren't in
perfect triangle... it all depends on the real 3-d arrangement of sats
in space.
I estimated the distance between the satellites #1 and #2 in two ways.
Method 1) Time
1. In my diagram above, #2 was following #1 almost dead behind. As #1
passed a bright star, I noticed it took 7+/- seconds for #2 to pass the
same star, as it followed #1 in it's orbit.
Assuming that the sats were cruising at about 17,500 mph in their orbit
(at altitude approx 700+ miles up) it's a simple calculation:
distance #2 to #1: d = (17,500 mph) x (1hr/3600sec) x (7 sec) = 34 miles
Assuming my timing was within 1 second:
dist = 29 miles (6 sec) to 39 miles(8 sec), with 34 being the average.
Method #2) Geometry
First off, I have more faith in the "timing" method, above. This next
method has more assumptions and guesstimations.
I noted that the angular separation between #1 and #2 was (approx) 3.5
degrees when I observed them at (approx) 45 degrees elevation.
#2 was following #1 EXACTLY, so that the 3.5 degree apparent separation
was getting smaller, as the sats began to set in the south.
Assume: All 3 Sats altitude: 700 miles
2 1
_________________ o.....o ------> flight
T 3.5 deg apparent
| / separation
| /
/
700 miles /
| /
| /
|
| o/
| |
_______L_________ / \ sats appear 45 degrees above horizon
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Now, from geometry:
If the sats were OVERHEAD, the angular separation between 1 and 2 would
be (3.5 deg/sin45)= 4.95 degrees. If they were overhead, they would
also be 700 miles away. Sooooo, if "d" is the distance between the sats
in miles,
d = 700mi x (sin(4.95deg))
= 60 miles.
So, the first (more accurate) method gave approx 34 miles separation
between the spacecraft, and the second method gave approx 60 miles. Both
are within the same order of magnitude, so we're doing pretty well, I guess.
Does anyone know the actual sep between these two particular sats?
My personal guess: 36.88132 miles. There appeared to be more distance
between #3 and the others, but no estimate here.
You really do need binocs - at least if you're in a city. Bring a laptop
comp w/you outside, and learn to translate screen position from traksat
to the real sky. It takes a little practice.
The skies were clear but light-polluted here in Boston.
I estimate that the trio was magnitude 5.5 - 6.0, but definitely not
brighter than 5.5 when they were 45 degrees elevation, in the SE (in
the square of pegasus). At the time of observation, the sats were
approximately 1000 miles from my eyeballs (which were 0.0000316 miles apart!).
I hope that this lengthy discourse is of interest to some of you out
there. I had to freeze my parabolas off to see them!
- Ron Dantowitz
Hayden Planetarium, Boston
(617) 589-0270
P.S. I also captured Cosmos 0955 r rocket booster on video through
a Meade LX200. I used a real-time 0.5 lux CCD at prime
focus. Video is a bit jumpy, but ok. I wish the LX200
could track those automatically!
Anyone ever try this before?
**********************************************************************
* Thought seems dangerously close to opinion, so I claim full
responsibility for this reposting, and deny that SAIC had anything to do
with it.
Article: 47009
From: [email protected] (Kenneth Salisbury)
Newsgroups: sci.astro
Subject: Re: NOSS/Whitecloud observation, Traksat?, servoed camera pointer
Date: 14 Nov 93 00:08:47
Organization: MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
This is very cool. I'm glad to hear I not the only one in the Boston
(Cambridge) area that sits on the roof (braving cold and light
pollution) with with a laptop tracking things at night. (I'm new to
this, so slowly rising planets and stars are as far as I have gotten.)
A few thoughts:
1) Where can I find Traksat? I've checked a few ftp sites w/out luck;
is it a commercial program? (I love Skyglobe and have spent many
hours with it learning how things move in the sky, and yes I paid my
$20, well worth it.) I'd like not to have to rely on my 4-year old
daughter finding satellites for me watch (no she doesn't go on the roof).
2) We've built a high-performance camera pointing device for a small
CCD-camera in our lab (for use in tracking small objects for our robot
to catch). It seems this could be well used to aid visual tracking of
satellites and video taping them. If satellite positions can be
obtained in real-time from code running a laptop then this should be
possible (given a better camera and a bit of code to glue things together).
>> Anybody ever tried this?
(Yes, I know NASA and the military must do this all the time, but I'd
like to do it at on a high-tech roof-top budget). Since our system is
designed to detect and track moving objects, I can imagine leaving it
running overnite to track and tape all the moving stuff that crosses
its field of view (like satellites, planes, meteors, aliens...). Sure
would make for better morning TV viewing than the news or Sesame street
(but not shuttle launches).
-K.
\ramblings {It was sure fun this morning watching Jupiter, Venus, and Mercury
rise through and then over a nearby appartment building antenna. I saw the
(first 4) moons of Jupiter for the first time since I was a kid.}
Article: 47027
Newsgroups: sci.astro
From: [email protected] (William Krosney)
Subject: Re: NOSS/Whitecloud observation, Traksat?, servoed camera pointer
Sender: [email protected]
Organization: University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada
Date: Sun, 14 Nov 1993 19:21:09 GMT
Greetings,
Traksat is a shareware product, and is available off a number of BBS's.
Try T.S.Kelso's Celestial BBS at 513-427-0674, no parity, 8 data bits,
1 stop bit. If anyone knows of an ftp site for it or any of the popular
satellite tracking programs, I would be most interested as I am working
on an article on sat. tracking. Please post or e-mail directly.
There are a number of really good sat. programs out there. Here is a
brief list:
STSORBIT PLUS...........Dave Ransom author, obtain from Celestial BBS
TRAKSTAR................TS Kelso's program, ftp site:
archive.afit.af.mil pub/space
as well as the Celestial BBS
SEESAT..................Paul Hirose author, obtain from Celestial BBS
QUICKSAT................Mike McCants author, obtain from Celestial BBS
VIEWSAT.................Dave Rasmussen author, obtain from Celestial BBS
These are all IBM-DOS compatable.
As for the NOSS satellites, they must have rather large reflecting
surfaces of some sort. I tracked them once through 10x50 binoculars
and estimated their mag. at probably 5th or 6th when they were nearly
overhead at azimuth of approx. 70 deg. However, as they moved further
away from me and dropped considerably in azimuth I was able to spot
them at about 20 - 25 deg. above the horizon. Their phase of
illumination must of been near 100 percent, because even at that
azimuth, and at a much greater line of sight distance they were easy
3rd magnitude objects. Anyone know a little more about them?
--
______________________________________________________________________
< E-mail: [email protected] >< Phone: (204) 896-0006 >
< Wm. Krosney, 29 Blossom Bay, Winnipeg, MB, CANADA, R3R 2W1 >
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Article: 46975
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.astro
Subject: More about NOSS/White Cloud
Date: 11 Nov 93 17:52:37 PST
Organization: Science Applications Int'l Corp./San Diego
The Russian journal "Foreign Military Review" recently published a
four-page article* on the history, characteristics, and orbitology of
the NOSS/White Cloud satellites. These, of course, are the satellites
which fly in formations of three, to the delight and frequent surprise
of sky-watchers.
Two tables from the article are given below. To (hopefully)
forestall some confusion, here is what the author says about the NOSS
and SSU components mentioned in Table 2:
"In 1976-1980 the Pentagon deployed on orbit an ELINT system
consisting of three groups of first-generation SSU satellites. The
satellites, mounted on a NOSS satellite-platform with a multiple-
start liquid engine, were launched from the Western Test Range on
an Atlas booster into circular orbits at an altitude of 1100 km
and inclination of 63.5 degrees. Forming the orbital layout
[Formirovaniye orbital'nogo postroyeniya] of the group was carried
out in the process of multi-impulse maneuvering of the satellite-
platform and sequential seperation from it of the three small SSU
satellites." (An "impulse" in this context is the same as a "burn"
in U.S. space-speak.)
Table 1
Data on the Satellites and Their Operating Lifetimes
Orbital Serial number Type of Lifetime in
plane of group satellite orbit
A 1 SSU-1 1976-1983
A 4 SSU-1A 1983-1992
A 10 SSU-2 Since 1992
A 2 SSU-1 1978-1984
B 5 SSU-1A 1984-1986
B 7 SSU-2 [sic] Since 1986
B 3 SSU-1 1980-1988
C 8 SSU-1A 1988-1990
C 9 SSU-2 Since 1990
[C?] Launch failure SSU-1
D 6 SSU-1A Since 1984
Table 2
Characteristics of the White Cloud ELINT System
Characteristic SSU-1 SSU-1A Second
(original (modernized generation
model) model) SSU-2
Years
launched 1976-1980 1983-1987 Since 1990
Number of
successfully
launched groups
(satellites) 3(9) 5(15) 2(6)
Booster type Atlas-F Atlas-F Titan-4
Range WTR WTR WTR and ETR
Orbital
insertion method direct direct multi-impulse
Days to make
group operational 20-25 15-25 30-40
Average distance
between satellites
in a group, km 50-240 50-240 30-110
Mean lifetime in
orbit, years 6-7 7-9 > 7
Range of
intercepted
frequencies, GHz
(presumed) 0.5-4 0.5-4 0.5-10
Mass in orbit, tonnes
Cluster [?-svyazka]
(NOSS and SSU) 1-1.5 1-1.5 4-8
SSU satellite 0.196 0.2 > 0.2
NOSS satellite 0.548 0.6 3-7
Stabilization
system Gravity-gradient
Dimensions of
SSU body, m. 0.3x0.9x0.4 0.3x0.9x0.4 1-3 (length)
* Kosmicheskaya Sistema Radiotekhnicheskoy Razvedki VMS SShA "Uayt Klaud"
[The U.S. Navy's "White Cloud" Spaceborne ELINT System]
by Major A. Andronov
Zarubezhnoye Voyennoye Obozreniye (ISSN 0134-921X), No.7, 1993, pp.57-60
|
360.11 | Unknown object observations report | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Tue Nov 23 1993 07:33 | 239 |
| From: US1RMC::"ASTRO%[email protected]" "Astronomy Discussion
List" 23-NOV-1993 01:17:55.01
To: Multiple recipients of list ASTRO <ASTRO%[email protected]>
CC:
Subj: Strange Observation
The message below was received from Erik Hoeg of Copenhagen University
Observatory. Anyone with a possible explanation about the observations
is invited to contact Erik Hoeg (address at the end of the message).
Relayed by Ton Schoenmaker - Kapteyn Observatory - The Netherlands
----------------------------------------------------------------
Message #7 on `Tygorm', 16 Nov. 1993:
#7 is an update of #6. It contains a table of observations;
a correction of total observation time from 85 to 70 minutes;
a new observation; more details, and a rearrangement of sections.
----------------------------------------------------------------
A mysterious -9 mag object
==========================
The object `Tygorm'
------------------
An object near zenith was discovered and observed by the weatherman A
on the Danish gas production platform Tyra-East in the North Sea at
position 55 deg 43.5 m north, 04 deg 48.2 m east. The observation
was taken between 3:50 and 5:00 UTC on 20 Oct 1993 and was reported
to the present author from 7:00 UTC the same morning and in numerous
phone conversations since then. Its integrated brightness was
about -9 mag.
I would be grateful for your assistance.
It should have been seen from elsewhere since the night was quite
clear and observers within a radius of 1000 km would have seen an
object brighter than -6 mag at a zenithdistance of less than 80 degrees.
Observer A
------------
An object near zenith was discovered and observed by the weatherman A
on the Danish gas production platform Tyra-East in the North Sea at
position 55 deg 43.5 m north, 04 deg 48.2 m east. The observation
was taken between 3:50 and 5:00 UTC on 20 Oct 1993 and was reported
to the present author from 7:00 UTC the same morning and in numerous
phone conversations since then. Its integrated brightness was
about -9 mag. The moon was below the horizon.
The object was watched by observer A every 15 minutes for 70 minutes,
interrupted by clouds as he looked out at 5:15. He saw a diffuse
circular orange disk of the moon's diameter without structure, but
he was much disturbed by background light from a big gas flame on
the platform. The observer used naked eye and a good binocular. He
noticed a grainy surface. He saw no change of brightness or
appearance during that time.
The object stayed for observer A at nearly constant distance to
Capella which was seen at 10 degrees to WSW at 3:50 UT and at
about 7 degrees at 5:00, the times of first and last sight.
This indicates a westward motion among the stars of 3 degrees
in 70 minutes, although this figure is uncertain and could be zero.
Derived positions are given in the Table.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 1. `Tygorm' was discovered by Observer A in the south-east
North Sea at 3:50 UTC on 20 October 1993. It was then 5.7 deg south
of zenith and 1.0 deg east of the meridian.
h_sun is altitude of the sun; H_shadow is vertical height of the earth
shadow.
Time Tygorm sun earth
UTC RA 1950 Dec h_sun H_shadow
3:50 6h 10m 50.0deg -21.8deg 490km
5:00 5h 52m 48.8deg -12.0deg 142km
----------------------------------------------------------------------
The constant appearance and the celestial motion indicated an
astronomical object, perhaps a comet. But a report to B. Marsden on the
same morning did not bring any further observation, and it was
concluded that the object must be local. This hypothesis has however
led to no acceptable explanation of the phenomenon.
The surface brightness was estimated by a simple visual photometer to
one percent of the moon. The photometry was obtained by A five
days later on my proposal by watching the first quarter moon through
the two acryl plates of an empty tape cassette. He estimated that
the object was considerable brighter than the twice reflected
image of the moon. Since this image has a surface brightness
about 0.3 percent of the moon, the object has had a surface brightness
about one percent of the moon. Since the integrated brightness of
the full moon is -13 mag and the total area of the object
was at least one square degree as seen by the other observers a
total integrated brightness about -9 mag is inferred.
Since the reflectivity of the moon is about 0.1 it follows that the
reflectivity of the object is 0.001, if it is shining in reflected
sunlight. But this does not agree well with observer B's statement
on orange and bluish colour, indicating a self luminous plasma.
Observer B
----------
A ship 500 m south of Tyra was called by radio and the object was
observed by observer B four or five times during about 60 minutes.
He tried to photograph it but gave up because of the ship's motion.
He watched the object directly and by means of a good binocular.
He could see much structure which did not change during the time.
It looked like a drop pushing a slim bow wave in front of its broad end.
A sketch of 9 November has been provided. He saw a granular surface,
with a large number of small points inside the object. The borders of
the drop were quite sharp, like a gas flame. It was orange in the
middle and bluish outward. He is sure there was only one drop.
Observers C and D
-----------------
The object was also observed by two persons, C and D, on the platform
Gorm, 18 km south of Tyra who had overheard the radio conversation
between A and B. They saw two orange drops close together, near zenith,
both drops being about one square degree. From their (independent)
sketches of 24 October and from phone conversations the declination
48.0 deg and the same RA as above were derived. This corresponds to
a parallax of -2 degrees. Permitting very generously a total error
of 5 degrees, the maximum parallax is -2+5=3 deg, and the minimum
height therefore 340 km above sea level.
Observer E
----------
The object was observed by E from a ship located 100 m
east of Tyra. He went up to watch when he heard the observer B
speak with observer A. His observation deviates much from the others in
geometrical appearance, but is discussed in detail because of
the unknown nature of the object, and because he might possibly
have seen it disappear shortly after 5:00.
He said he saw 3 stripes about "7 degres north of zenith". They were
equally long and looked similar to railway sleepers, about 8 degrees
long. Each one was in the proportions 3 m long, 30 cm wide and 20 cm
high, looking 3-dimensional. They were 1 meter apart; pink in colour
and perhaps transparent. He watched the phenomenon briefly several
times during about 15 minutes, starting about 4:00 UTC. He saw no
change during that period. About 5:05 he looked again, but it had
disappeared, although he thinks it was still clear sky. He also
saw stars but did not notice any in particular. His surroundings
were quite bright from the big gas flame, but he saw the phenomenon
very clearly. He has never seen anything similar.
His sketch of 9 November shows three bars placed besides of a moon in
order to show the relative size. This would make the bars two degrees
long, similar to that seen by the other observers, but much less than
the 8 degrees he mentioned first. When asked to try with fingers towards
the sky he finally decides that the length of the bars was 2
fingerwidths, or 4 degrees. He does not recall whether he wore glasses
on the morning, but he does not think it would have made any
difference. He is slightly short-sighted and wears -1 diopter. - I am
convinced he saw the same object as all others although it appeared so
different to his eyes.
Motion and height
-----------------
Since the slow motion and the great height are crucial for any
explanation of the object I discuss these questions more deeply.
The observed angular velocity relative to the rotating earth is about
12.5 deg/hour =6.E-5 rad/s (15cos(delta) for Capella + 3 deg in 1 hour.)
This implies a horizontal velocity of 30 m/s at a height of 500 km.
The very slow motion relative to stars is beyond doubt from
observation by A. Every 15 minutes he saw in fact both star and object,
and he made sure the next night that the star was really Capella.
The resulting declination of 50 degrees cannot have an error larger
than one degree.
An object must be less than 10 or 15 degrees within zenith in order
that people would say it is right at zenith. The sketch by D on Gorm,
18 km south of A, shows a star. D assures that it was very bright
and about 10 degrees from the object and towards west, as shown.
It must be Capella as D indicates, and there is no other bright star to
the north with which it could be confused. This excludes the
suspicion that the object could be far north of zenith due to a large
parallax. The declination of 48 degrees seen from Gorm is then
derived from the sketch by D. The resulting parallax is -2 degrees,
and the error is probably less than 3 degrees, but cannot possibly
be larger than 5 degrees, resulting in a maximum parallax of
-2+5=3 degrees. The minimum height is therefore 340 km above sea level.
The sketch by C contains a star said to be 3 times fainter than Polaris
which would make it 3 mag. It cannot be identified since there is no
star in the sky of similar magnitude, consistent with the position
derived from observer D. Observer C was not quite sure he put the
star at the right place in his sketch.
Any object should change appearance when it changes from being in the
earth shadow to become sunlit. The observed constant brightness during
70 minutes therefore precludes an object in the interval of height from
142 to 490 km since the earth shadow varied in this range. This
strongly indicates a height of the object above 490 km to begin with.
No explanation found
--------------------
Explanations in terms of noctilucent clouds, chemical experimental
clouds or space craft exhaust are not consistent with the long duration
of constant appearance and the nearly constant position relative to the
stars. Aurora seems to be excluded for the same reason and because
their was no special event on 20 October. P. Suesmann, Deutsche Telekom,
reports: "The sun was quiet with no flares or other events,
the geomagnetic field was unsettled and from the view of HF
propagation there was nothing extraordinary as well."
For dynamical reasons a distance larger than some 100000 km
seems required to explain the slow angular motion when we are
sure the height is larger than a few hundred km. Could an object perhaps
escape observation from other places of the earth if it had
a short duration of a few hours, combined with cloudy weather?
Could it be the (sunlit) exhaust of a distant spacecraft during orbit
control? But the linear size of a one degree object at such distance
is incredible, several thousand kilometers.
I intend to arrange a discussion between observers, geophysicists,
space scientists and astronomers.
------------------------------------------------------------------
The company Maersk Olie og Gas AS has now equipped the Tyra
platform with a zoom camera for use in case of future unusual events.
Sincerely yours Erik Hoeg
Copenhagen University Observatory
Oestervoldgade 3, DK 1350 Copenhagen K
[email protected] Telex: 44155 danast
Phone: +45 35 323999 FAX +45 35 323989 to Observatory
Phone: +45 35 323975 directly to Hoeg
--------------------- End of message -----------------------------
% ====== Internet headers and postmarks (see DECWRL::GATEWAY.DOC) ======
% Date: Tue, 23 Nov 1993 01:08:42 EST
% Sender: Astronomy Discussion List <ASTRO%[email protected]>
% From: LABBEY%[email protected]
% Subject: Strange Observation
% To: Multiple recipients of list ASTRO <ASTRO%[email protected]>
|
360.12 | Spherical Satellites | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Wed Dec 15 1993 15:20 | 105 |
| Article: 48613
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.astro
Subject: Spherical satellites
Date: 14 Dec 93 16:50:56 PST
Organization: Science Applications Int'l Corp./San Diego
For those interested in following the details of satellite orbital
behavior, the following information may be useful.
Over the years, several countries have launched spherical
satellites, initially for space surveillance system calibration and
later as geodetic aids. All of them, particularly those in lower
orbits, should be good for monitoring fluctuations in atmospheric
density and for 'normalizing' the behavior of other objects at similar
altitudes. (My particular interest is in using them as an adjunct in
studying the strange behavior of Cosmos 1697, Cosmos 1833, and other
objects of the Cosmos 1603 class.)
Lt.Col. Dr. Prof. (I can't resist listing all those titles :-) ) Tom
Kelso, sysop of the Celestial BBS and poster of orbital elements in
sci.space.news, has very kindly obtained extensive (basically all sets
since 1980) collections of orbital elements for a number of the earlier
spherical satellites and has posted then in file area 2 of his board:
look for the files with the form SAT0nnnn.2LE and a date of 5 Dec 1993.
The number of the BBS is 513-427-0674 until 6 January 1994 and 513-253-
9767 thereafter.
Below is a table of the information I've found on the satellites,
giving their masses and diameters; note that different sources give
slightly different values for these numbers, so don't do anything with
them that requires great precision. Additions and corrections are
welcome. For orientation purposes, there are also recentish orbital
elements for the objects.
Int'l NORAD Name/Description Diameter Mass
cm kg
64063C 00900 Calsphere 1 36 1
64063E 00902 Calsphere 2 36 10
65034C 01361 Lincoln Calibration Sphere 1 113 34
65065E 01512 Tempsat (dull black) 36 9
65065H 01520 Calsphere 4A (white) 36 2
67053B 02825 Calsphere 51 2.4
67053H 02874 Calsphere ? ?
67053J 02909 Surcal 150B 41 1.5
71067E 05398 LCS 4/Gridsphere 1 113 37
75010A 07646 Starlette (60 corner reflectors) 25 47
76039A 08820 Lageos (426 corner reflectors) 60 411
86061A 16908 EGP (318 mirrors & 120 corner reflectors) 210 685
89001C 19751 Etalon 1 (> 2000 corner reflectors) 142 130
89039C 20026 Etalon 2 (> 2000 corner reflectors) 142 130
92070B 22195 Lageos II (426 corner reflectors) 60 405
93061B 22824 Stella (60 corner reflectors) 24 48
Calsphere 1
1 00900U 93339.67878861 .00000382 46713-3 0 7171
2 00900 90.0974 221.0528 0022918 201.8797 158.1387 13.64628126444145
Calsphere 2
1 00902U 93340.67643814 .00000069 10000-3 0 7175
2 00902 90.1051 222.2667 0017144 132.5366 227.7241 13.52020477250888
LCS 1
1 01361U 93343.36568274 .00000004 10000-3 0 7156
2 01361 32.1454 297.4516 0005224 292.2370 67.7584 9.89242859 33980
Tempsat
1 01512U 93339.55414869 .00000053 10000-3 0 8171
2 01512 89.9676 349.2604 0071569 117.0592 243.7874 13.32919444376851
Calsphere 4A
1 01520U 93339.58184360 .00000046 84083-4 0 8167
2 01520 90.0606 14.4449 0072050 92.8094 268.1324 13.34319044377491
Calsphere
1 02825U 93320.61992687 .00000027 35489-4 0 1133
2 02825 69.9757 14.2793 0006210 160.1041 200.0317 13.95484006430954
Calsphere
1 02874U 93338.47147279 .00000110 97878-4 0 2177
2 02874 69.9732 345.2672 0005654 144.5012 215.6440 13.94947208349000
Surcal 150B
1 02909U 93345.43216678 .00001005 46234-3 0 9192
2 02909 69.9695 326.4162 0007939 247.5453 112.4737 14.23630557360019
LCS 4
1 05398U 93334.60354357 .00000287 11333-3 0 5156
2 05398 87.6293 358.1278 0072691 359.8053 0.3113 14.24731791174294
Starlette
1 07646U 93340.61353434 -.00000029 25197-4 0 7149
2 07646 49.8206 193.2746 0206006 60.2748 301.8390 13.82184803951206
Lageos
1 08820U 93341.59436023 -.00000000 10000-3 0 9181
2 08820 109.8568 69.9650 0043972 326.1358 33.6547 6.38664717154911
EGP
1 16908U 93339.36096697 .00000024 16905-3 0 8155
2 16908 50.0126 320.2962 0011570 180.0654 180.0202 12.44408617332628
Etalon 1
1 19751U 93339.28005458 .00000016 10000-3 0 8136
2 19751 64.9482 116.5260 0010681 244.4711 115.4131 2.13156154 38160
Etalon 2
1 20026U 93338.96958000 -.00000015 10000-3 0 7115
2 20026 65.5157 355.5240 0009929 253.6075 106.3264 2.13204272 35162
Lageos 2
1 22195U 93341.45060035 -.00000004 10000-3 0 2172
2 22195 52.6449 214.8726 0138060 33.8421 327.0879 6.47294068 26527
Stella
1 22824U 93340.66220271 .00000024 18147-4 0 2154
2 22824 98.6778 53.2034 0007352 53.8430 306.3462 14.27094001 10218
|
360.13 | In orbit as of November 30, 1993 | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Wed Feb 23 1994 15:21 | 89 |
| Article: 83333
From: [email protected] (Pradipto Muhkerjee)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Re: How many Satellites?
Date: 22 Feb 1994 15:31:08 -0600
Organization: Motorola, Inc. -- Austin,TX
In article <1994Feb14.193333.7623@guvax>
[email protected] (Noah Pearsall Lang) writes:
>I am not generally knowledgable in this area, but am quite ineterested
>in finding out the number of satellites (and other non-organic
>objects) orbiting the earth. How many of them are still active? Does
>anybody know the numbers for which countries have put up which
>satellites (i.e., # for U.S. =..., India =....). I am not a regualr
>subscriber to this group, if anybody has any information I would be
>forever greatful if you e-mailed it to me at
>[email protected]
>
>Thanks in advance,
> Noah.
SATELLITE SITUATION REPORT
NOVEMBER 30, 1993
THIS REPORT CONSISTS OF DATA COMPUTED AT UNITED STATES SPACE COMMAND,
GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER, OR PROVIDED BY SATELLITE OWNERS. THE
REPORT IS COMPILED AND PROVIDED BY: OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT AND SUPPORT
SECTION, CODE 513.1 NASA/GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER GREENBELT,
MARYLAND, U.S.A 20771
Agency In orbit Decayed
----------- -------- ---------
ARGENTINA 1
ARAB SAT. COMM. ORG. 0
ASIASAT CORP. 0
AUSTRALIA 6 1
BRAZIL 4
CANADA 16 1
CZECHOSLOVAKIA 1 1
EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY 24 4
EURO. SPACE RES. ORG. 0 7
FRANCE/FED. REP. GER. 2
FRANCE 23 7
FEDERAL REPUBLIC GER. 12 5
INT. MARIT. SAT. ORG. 3
INDIA 9 6
INDONESIA 6 1
ISRAEL 0 2
ITALY 4 5
INT. TELEC. SAT. ORG. 43 1
JAPAN 49 9
KOREA 2
LUXEMBOURG 3
MEXICO 3
NORTH AT. TREATY ORG. 7
NETHERLANDS 0 1
PAKISTAN 0 1
PORTUGAL 1
PEOPLES REP. OF CHINA 11 23
SAUDI ARABIA 3
SPAIN 3
SWEDEN 3
UNITED KINGDOM 16 8
UNITED STATES 619 643
RUSSIA 1276 1604
*****************************************************************************
* * Pradipto Mukherjee *
* ___ * Senior Software Engineer *
* / / / / * Power PC Project *
* /__/ __ ___ ___/ o ___ _/_ ___ * Motorola Inc. *
* / / / / / / / / / / / / * 9737 Great Hills Trail, MD-OE513 *
* / / /__/_ /__/ / /__/ /_ /__/ * Austin, Tx 78759 *
* / * Ph : 512 795 7284 *
* * Fax : 512 795 7513 *
* * email: [email protected] *
*****************************************************************************
* * POWER PC * *
* ************ *
* *
* Motorola Apple III BBB M M *
* /\ /\ __\__ I B B MMMMM *
* / \ / \ / / I BBB M M M *
* / \/ \ ( \ I B B M M *
* / \ \_/\__\ III BBB M M *
* *
*****************************************************************************
|
360.14 | Satellite Information Update | MTWAIN::KLAES | No Guts, No Galaxy | Mon Sep 19 1994 19:17 | 56 |
| From: US3RMC::"[email protected]" "D.J. Jessop" 17-SEP-1994 19:12:10.35
To: [email protected]
CC:
Subj: Satellite Information Update/Telstar 402 launch
Satellite Information Update
copyright 1994
Keystone Communications North American Satellite Guide
Wednesday September 7, 1994
After a number of delays, AT&T Telstar 402 is scheduled to launch from
French Guiana on an Ariane 42L rocket, September 8, 1994. The launch
window is 8:10 PM E.D.T. If the launch is delayed, it will be
rescheduled for Friday, September 9 at 8:10 PM EDT.
The Telstar 402 launch will be transmitted over Telstar 302,
Transponder 11H, Channel 22 (page 34 of Aug/Sept 1994 issue of
N.A.S.G.). The broadcast will begin at 7:40 PM EDT. If the launch is
delayed til Friday, the broadcast will be on Telstar 302, Transponder
8H, Channel 16.
An operational date of November 1, 1994 is targeted at the 89! WL
orbital slot.
Keystone Communications provides end-to-end video broadcast and
transmission services through its own network of origination facilites,
fiber optic and microwave systems, switching centers, teleports, and
satellite transponders. Keystone also publishes a bimonthly reference
guide, the Keystone Communications North American Satellite Guide, a
up-to-date, easy to understand guide to video traffic on North American
satellites available by subscription.
"Satellite Information Update" is a fax based update service available
to paid subscribers. FREE updates will also be posted periodically on
the Internet.
-----
"Any significantly advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic"
D.J. Jessop, Editor, Keystone Communications North American Satellite Guide
[email protected] voice: 800-752-2666 fax: 801-531-7375
"Check out the ad for our N.A.S.G. poster in Satellite Times!"
% ====== Internet headers and postmarks (see DECWRL::GATEWAY.DOC) ======
% From: "D.J. Jessop" <[email protected]>
% Newsgroups: sci.space.news
% Subject: Satellite Information Update/Telstar 402 launch
% Date: 17 Sep 1994 11:16:31 -0700
% Organization: Keystone Communications
% Approved: [email protected]
% Distribution: world
% Originator: [email protected]
% Apparently-To: [email protected]
|