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#1
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I had a curious experience a couple of weeks ago. The Heavens Above
website had predicted a mag -8 Iridium flare at my home. We had guests over for the evening, so I took them out to see the show. The flare appeared right on cue and was intensely bright. As I was explaining what they had just seen, a second equally intense flare appeared in the exact same spot less than a minute later. Are some of the satellites operating in pairs? I would have expected any defunct ones to be tumbling, or at least not nearly as bright. These two were obviously in very close orbit and alignment. Specifics: 40.8077N, 89.6089W, Feb 14, 19:06:45CST Iridium 43 (no idea what the other one was, not mentioned in the prediction table) Bryan (drop the X if you e-mail me) |
#3
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I've also seen a second (dimmer) flare from the same Iridium after the
first bright flare. It was about 10-seconds between the two flares. macnmotion wrote: Yes, this happens. Some travel a distance behind each other, some closer than that. I happened to catch a "trailer" when photographing this -4 flare last week: Here's the wide angle: http://www.macnmotion.com/iridium/iriddouble.jpg Here's a closeup with the second satellite visible (confirmed as two satellites in Starry Night): http://www.macnmotion.com/iridium/iriddoublecloseup.jpg By the way, the other Iridium satellite you saw was Iridium 77. macnmotion wrote: I had a curious experience a couple of weeks ago. The Heavens Above website had predicted a mag -8 Iridium flare at my home. We had guests over for the evening, so I took them out to see the show. The flare appeared right on cue and was intensely bright. As I was explaining what they had just seen, a second equally intense flare appeared in the exact same spot less than a minute later. Are some of the satellites operating in pairs? I would have expected any defunct ones to be tumbling, or at least not nearly as bright. These two were obviously in very close orbit and alignment. Specifics: 40.8077N, 89.6089W, Feb 14, 19:06:45CST Iridium 43 (no idea what the other one was, not mentioned in the prediction table) Bryan (drop the X if you e-mail me) -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#4
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I knew there were doubles up there (usually one out of commission), but
what really surprised me was that BOTH were mag -8 flares less than a minute apart. Thanks for the neat photo! macnmotion wrote: Yes, this happens. Some travel a distance behind each other, some closer than that. I happened to catch a "trailer" when photographing this -4 flare last week: Here's the wide angle: http://www.macnmotion.com/iridium/iriddouble.jpg Here's a closeup with the second satellite visible (confirmed as two satellites in Starry Night): http://www.macnmotion.com/iridium/iriddoublecloseup.jpg By the way, the other Iridium satellite you saw was Iridium 77. macnmotion wrote: I had a curious experience a couple of weeks ago. The Heavens Above website had predicted a mag -8 Iridium flare at my home. We had guests over for the evening, so I took them out to see the show. The flare appeared right on cue and was intensely bright. As I was explaining what they had just seen, a second equally intense flare appeared in the exact same spot less than a minute later. Are some of the satellites operating in pairs? I would have expected any defunct ones to be tumbling, or at least not nearly as bright. These two were obviously in very close orbit and alignment. Specifics: 40.8077N, 89.6089W, Feb 14, 19:06:45CST Iridium 43 (no idea what the other one was, not mentioned in the prediction table) Bryan (drop the X if you e-mail me) |
#5
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You want to see a neat one? Here's an extraordinary photo over 12
minutes by Johannes Schedler: http://tinyurl.com/2aqyr macnmotion wrote: I knew there were doubles up there (usually one out of commission), but what really surprised me was that BOTH were mag -8 flares less than a minute apart. Thanks for the neat photo! macnmotion wrote: Yes, this happens. Some travel a distance behind each other, some closer than that. I happened to catch a "trailer" when photographing this -4 flare last week: Here's the wide angle: http://www.macnmotion.com/iridium/iriddouble.jpg Here's a closeup with the second satellite visible (confirmed as two satellites in Starry Night): http://www.macnmotion.com/iridium/iriddoublecloseup.jpg By the way, the other Iridium satellite you saw was Iridium 77. macnmotion wrote: I had a curious experience a couple of weeks ago. The Heavens Above website had predicted a mag -8 Iridium flare at my home. We had guests over for the evening, so I took them out to see the show. The flare appeared right on cue and was intensely bright. As I was explaining what they had just seen, a second equally intense flare appeared in the exact same spot less than a minute later. Are some of the satellites operating in pairs? I would have expected any defunct ones to be tumbling, or at least not nearly as bright. These two were obviously in very close orbit and alignment. Specifics: 40.8077N, 89.6089W, Feb 14, 19:06:45CST Iridium 43 (no idea what the other one was, not mentioned in the prediction table) Bryan (drop the X if you e-mail me) |
#6
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I used to work on the Iridium program, so I can tell you with
certainty that these satellites do not operate in pairs that are as close together as you describe. However, they are crosslinked to other Iridium satellites in the constellation, but this is not really relevant to what you saw. There are several reasons that you might see to Iridium satellites in close proximity to each other from a line-of-sight perspective. The most likely cause is an non-operational satellite that died in mission orbit. The nature of the Iridium operational orbit results in failed satellites cycling through the slots of the other satellites within the same orbit plane, we used to call this "The Grand Tour". Another possibility is that you saw a satellite in a sparing orbit, where replacements are kept, which is nominally aligned with a mission orbit plane but at a lower altitude. These spare satellites can align along the line-of-sight with an operational satellite and cause the appearance of "double" flares. There are perhaps a few other possibilites, but the aforementioned two are what I consider to be the most likely to explain what you saw. BRP wrote in message ... I had a curious experience a couple of weeks ago. The Heavens Above website had predicted a mag -8 Iridium flare at my home. We had guests over for the evening, so I took them out to see the show. The flare appeared right on cue and was intensely bright. As I was explaining what they had just seen, a second equally intense flare appeared in the exact same spot less than a minute later. Are some of the satellites operating in pairs? I would have expected any defunct ones to be tumbling, or at least not nearly as bright. These two were obviously in very close orbit and alignment. Specifics: 40.8077N, 89.6089W, Feb 14, 19:06:45CST Iridium 43 (no idea what the other one was, not mentioned in the prediction table) Bryan (drop the X if you e-mail me) |
#7
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brp wrote:
I used to work on the Iridium program, so I can tell you with certainty that these satellites do not operate in pairs that are as close together as you describe. However, they are crosslinked to other Iridium satellites in the constellation, but this is not really relevant to what you saw. There are several reasons that you might see to Iridium satellites in close proximity to each other from a line-of-sight perspective. The most likely cause is an non-operational satellite that died in mission orbit. The nature of the Iridium operational orbit results in failed satellites cycling through the slots of the other satellites within the same orbit plane, we used to call this "The Grand Tour". Another possibility is that you saw a satellite in a sparing orbit, where replacements are kept, which is nominally aligned with a mission orbit plane but at a lower altitude. These spare satellites can align along the line-of-sight with an operational satellite and cause the appearance of "double" flares. There are perhaps a few other possibilites, but the aforementioned two are what I consider to be the most likely to explain what you saw. BRP Did the designers of the Iridium satellites realize they were going to produce very bright flares or was this discovered after they were launched? -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#8
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starman wrote in message ...
Did the designers of the Iridium satellites realize they were going to produce very bright flares or was this discovered after they were launched? I don't recall hearing this discussed prior to the observations of flares that were made once the satellites were in orbit. However, it could have easily been predicted since the main mission antennas are essentially mirrors, with a highly reflective surface canted down 40 degrees from the nadir/zenith line on all three sides of the spacecraft. BRP |
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