Total Pageviews

Monday 7 September 2009

Possible 4 to 5 Views Of The STS Discovery Close To The ISS

Worth looking at-better with Binoculars-guess I'll get behind the Village Church again where there is an Excellent South West right round to the Eastern Horizon to see this-clear skies....

 
Date
Mag Starts Max. altitude Ends
Time Alt. Az. Time Alt. Az. Time Alt. Az.
8 Sep -1.1 20:12:13 10 SSE 20:13:07 11 SE 20:13:43 11 SE
8 Sep -0.5 21:45:02 10 SW 21:45:15 12 SW 21:45:15 12 SW
9 Sep -2.0 20:35:09 10 SSW 20:37:30 23 SSE 20:38:01 22 SE
10 Sep -2.9 20:59:16 10 SW 21:02:01 42 SSE 21:02:05 42 SSE

NASA SKYWATCH SKYLOG OUTPUT

***** User-Input *****

Satellite Local Date/Time Pass Max Elev
(Deg)
Approach
(Deg-Dir)
Departure
(Deg-Dir)
ISS Tue-Sep-08,09@20:12
01m00s
11
10-above-SSE 10-above-SE
ISS Tue-Sep-08,09@21:44
00m20s
10
10-above-SW 10-above-SW
ISS Wed-Sep-09,09@20:35
02m00s
22
12-above-SSW 21-above-SE
ISS Wed-Sep-09,09@22:09
00m20s
10
10-above-WSW 10-above-WSW
ISS Thu-Sep-10,09@20:59
02m00s
42
10-above-SW 42-above-SSE

--
Good Clear Skies
--
Astrocomet
--
Colin James Watling
--
Astronomer and head of the Comet section for LYRA (Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth Regional Astronomers) also head of K.A.G (Kessingland Astronomy Group) and Navigator of the Stars (Fieldwork)
--
Web: http://lyra.freewebsites.com/

No comments: