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Re: Sunny Side Up
- Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: Sunny Side Up
- From: "Jeff Yanko" <wb3jfs@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 15 Aug 2008 04:33:07 -0700
Good point. If it's in the Sun, it has vaporized! The best terminology(s)
would be "in sunlight" or "sunlight illuminated". Another one could be
"sunlight reflection".
As for a satellite being visible. It is required to be "sunlight
illuminated" to be seen since we can only see the reflection of light off of
its surface, it is not self illuminating. :) I recall seeing numerous
objects pass from light to dark and the item visually disappeared. Yet, I
kept track of the path and followed the object for a few seconds and I could
see it blank out some stars that happened to be in its path! Just follow
the orbital plane for a bit, but after about 5 to 10 seconds you lose track
of the path.
Jeff WB3JFS
----- Original Message -----
From: "Simon (HB9DRV)" <simon@hb9drv.ch>
To: "AMSAT.org" <amsat-bb@amsat.org>
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2008 4:12 AM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: Sunny Side Up
> Terminology: is a satellite in the sun, in the shade, illuminated... ?
>
> I can say a satellite is visible, what's a simple was of saying it's
> illuminated by the sun?
>
> Simon Brown, HB9DRV
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Jeff Yanko" <wb3jfs@cox.net>
>>
>> It would also be used for trying to visually see the object. Especially
>> helpful when the observer is in darkness but the satellite is
>> illuminated.
>> Just last week I saw the ISS pass over while it was fairly dark, not
>> complete, yet plenty of sunlight at 200 or so miles above earth.
>>
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