[ATMoB-discuss] ISS/Atlantis
Bruce Berger
bruce at scopemaker.com
Sat Jun 30 12:57:10 CEST 2007
Paul et, al;
We can slew at 1.5 degrees/second. Maybe someone 'in the know' can help me
get the tracking process in place for next time.
Bruce
-----Original Message-----
From: atmob-discuss-bounces at atmob.org
[mailto:atmob-discuss-bounces at atmob.org] On Behalf Of Paul A. Valleli
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2007 10:01 PM
To: John Boudreau; atmob-discuss at atmob.org; stmlist at yahoo.com; Paul Valleli
Subject: Re: [ATMoB-discuss] ISS/Atlantis
John,All
I don't think the GT1100 is powerful enough to move the C14 fast enough and
stay on course - I measured
15 degees in 10 seconds last week, using Al Takeda's and Mike Schexnaydre's
images which show the Dipper in the FOV . That's 1.5 deg. per sec. It would
have been faster than that when overhead.
If Bruce Berger can get the motor/controller upgrades installed from SBIG,
It should do it.
Paul
---- Original message ----
Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 18:43:22 -0400
From: "John Boudreau" <jeboud at comcast.net>
Subject: Re: [ATMoB-discuss] ISS/Atlantis
To: <atmob-discuss at atmob.org>,
<stmlist at yahoo.com>, "Paul Valleli"
<pvalleli at axsys.com>
>I'm not sure if our club's GT1100 mount can do
it, but I know Software Bisque's 'The Sky 6' can
be used to make a Paramount ME track satellites
pretty accurately. It certainly would be something
to look into. If the GT1100 can do it, the club
may already have most of the equipment to image
the ISS with surprising results.
>
>You may remember my hand tracked webcam ISS shots
from last week, with a TEC140 refractor working at
f/7:
>http://home.comcast.net/~jeboud/satellites.htm
>
>Well, here's a couple of shots also taken with a
TEC140 by Domenik Wos in Poland--- but at 4x the
effective focal length, a more sensitive video
camera, and auto-tracked on the ISS with an AP
1200 GTO:
>http://www.astrophotography.pl/solsys/iss/07.06.16/07.06.16.html
>Atlantis is visible at the RH end of the ISS in
both shots.
>
>Remember, that's still only a 5.5" refractor
resolving it that well. Think what the C14 could
do!
>
>---John
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Paul Valleli" <pvalleli at axsys.com>
>To: <atmob-discuss at atmob.org>;
<stmlist at yahoo.com>
>Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2007 2:13 PM
>Subject: [ATMoB-discuss] ISS/Atlantis
>
>
>> There is an amazing and incredibly sharp
picture of the ISS and
>> Atlantis STS-117 taken by Ron Dantowitz and
Marek Kozubal with the
>> 25-inch scope at Clay Center.
>> Go to APOD -astronomy picture of the day for
today June28.
>>
>> http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
>>
>>
>> Paul
>>
>>
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>>
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>>
>
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