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Last night it was too hot to sleep so I spent a little time with the
stars. The sky was clear but bright (Los Angeles County); I could see all four of the faint stars in the Little Dipper, and there was a hint of Milky Way in Cygnus. At 2004 Aug 09 07:17 UTC (12:17 local time), I was looking at Lyra, trying to split epsilon Lyrae with my unaided eye, when there appeared a stationary flash of light about 5 degrees west of Vega. It brightened gradually and faded gradually, with a total duration of about a second. It peaked at 2nd magnitude. I don't remember a color, but it was definitely not as blue as Vega nor as red as say Arcturus. And it didn't appear to move. It wasn't an Iridium flare (I checked). It probably wasn't an airplane -- no motion, and the wrong part of the sky. The flight paths into LAX and BUR go either way south or way west of us, and this was quite high in the sky. The most probable cause was a head-on meteor -- but this happened in the western part of the sky (definitely not a Perseid) -- what are the chances that a sporadic meteor would appear in the NW *and* be headed straight for me? Any other possibilities? Gamma-ray burst? I'm still puzzling. -- Bill Owen (still able to split eps Lyr, although it was a lot easier when my eyes were 30 years younger!) |
#2
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![]() Any other possibilities? Gamma-ray burst? Hi: No. Not unless your eyes are _really_ good. :-) One possibility is a satellite. Doesn't have to be an iridium for the Solar panels to catch the Sun when the position is right. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Check-out sct-user, the mailing list for CAT fanciers! Goto http://members.aol.com/RMOLLISE/index.html |
#3
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On Mon, 09 Aug 2004 14:49:59 -0700, Bill Owen wrote:
Last night it was too hot to sleep so I spent a little time with the stars. The sky was clear but bright (Los Angeles County); I could see all four of the faint stars in the Little Dipper, and there was a hint of Milky Way in Cygnus. At 2004 Aug 09 07:17 UTC (12:17 local time), I was looking at Lyra, trying to split epsilon Lyrae with my unaided eye, when there appeared a stationary flash of light about 5 degrees west of Vega. It brightened gradually and faded gradually, with a total duration of about a second. It peaked at 2nd magnitude. I don't remember a color, but it was definitely not as blue as Vega nor as red as say Arcturus. And it didn't appear to move. It wasn't an Iridium flare (I checked). It probably wasn't an airplane -- no motion, and the wrong part of the sky. The flight paths into LAX and BUR go either way south or way west of us, and this was quite high in the sky. The most probable cause was a head-on meteor -- but this happened in the western part of the sky (definitely not a Perseid) -- what are the chances that a sporadic meteor would appear in the NW *and* be headed straight for me? Any other possibilities? Gamma-ray burst? I'm still puzzling. -- Bill Owen (still able to split eps Lyr, although it was a lot easier when my eyes were 30 years younger!) See your Doctor at once. I won't elaborate, I don't want to worry you too much. |
#4
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Rod Mollise wrote:
Any other possibilities? Gamma-ray burst? Hi: No. Not unless your eyes are _really_ good. :-) One possibility is a satellite. Doesn't have to be an iridium for the Solar panels to catch the Sun when the position is right. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Check-out sct-user, the mailing list for CAT fanciers! Goto http://members.aol.com/RMOLLISE/index.html there is so much junk up there, it could be a booster....last time i grabbed the sattelite data, i had to sort through almost 9,000 listed critters floating around... and you don't get to know about the paranoidal stuff.... btw hi rod, long time....and i was *not* in jail ;-) |
#5
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![]() "Bill Owen" wrote in message ... Last night it was too hot to sleep so I spent a little time with the stars. The sky was clear but bright (Los Angeles County); I could see all four of the faint stars in the Little Dipper, and there was a hint of Milky Way in Cygnus. At 2004 Aug 09 07:17 UTC (12:17 local time), I was looking at Lyra, trying to split epsilon Lyrae with my unaided eye, when there appeared a stationary flash of light about 5 degrees west of Vega. It brightened gradually and faded gradually, with a total duration of about a second. It peaked at 2nd magnitude. I don't remember a color, but it was definitely not as blue as Vega nor as red as say Arcturus. And it didn't appear to move. It wasn't an Iridium flare (I checked). It probably wasn't an airplane -- no motion, and the wrong part of the sky. The flight paths into LAX and BUR go either way south or way west of us, and this was quite high in the sky. The most probable cause was a head-on meteor -- but this happened in the western part of the sky (definitely not a Perseid) -- what are the chances that a sporadic meteor would appear in the NW *and* be headed straight for me? Any other possibilities? Gamma-ray burst? I'm still puzzling. As Spock would say...Facinating! You can't say you saw a UFO because it wasn't flying (was stationary). You can say, that yes, a strait on meteor was heading your way. IMHO |
#6
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btw hi rod, long time....and i was *not* in jail ;-)
Good to hear! :-) Yes, a spent booster is a very likely candidate. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Check-out sct-user, the mailing list for CAT fanciers! Goto http://members.aol.com/RMOLLISE/index.html |
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