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DPChallenge Forums >> Individual Photograph Discussion >> Satellite in the Big Dipper
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Showing posts 1 - 7 of 7, (reverse)
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01/13/2005 10:30:45 AM · #1
I was out this morning taking photo of the big dipper, I did not notice, when I was taking this photo, that a satellite was in the field of while I was doing the exposure. This was a 10 second exposure so the satellite was moving pretty slow.
01/13/2005 10:37:35 AM · #2
That's cool.

Some time last year I was looking at Orion with my C5, and a satellite crossed through my field of view. I went and looked up what was moving in that area at that time, and it was an old Russian rocket stage that was still in orbit.

Chad
01/13/2005 10:43:25 AM · #3
Originally posted by cpurser:

That's cool.

Some time last year I was looking at Orion with my C5, and a satellite crossed through my field of view. I went and looked up what was moving in that area at that time, and it was an old Russian rocket stage that was still in orbit.

Chad


I was so thrilled the first time I found out that you could see satellites from earth when someone pointed one out to me a few years ago...but this is even more intriguing!

How/Where can I look it up?

Edit: And Scott, can you look up what satellite that was...just out of curiosity...

Message edited by author 2005-01-13 10:43:48.
01/13/2005 10:44:52 AM · #4
Pretty cool... for now. I'm sure this is just as much of a novelty today as finding a jet contrail was in a sunset picture 40 years ago. In another 20 years, photographers will be cursing all the satellite trails messing up their astrophotos.

BTW- you haven't lived until you've been hunched over a big scope studying the detail on a faint galaxy... and a firefly lands on your corrector lens. Yipes!
01/13/2005 10:48:18 AM · #5
Originally posted by thatcloudthere:

Originally posted by cpurser:

That's cool.

Some time last year I was looking at Orion with my C5, and a satellite crossed through my field of view. I went and looked up what was moving in that area at that time, and it was an old Russian rocket stage that was still in orbit.

Chad


I was so thrilled the first time I found out that you could see satellites from earth when someone pointed one out to me a few years ago...but this is even more intriguing!

How/Where can I look it up?

Edit: And Scott, can you look up what satellite that was...just out of curiosity...

Try Space Junk. I searched for that term and that was the first site, but there are others.
01/13/2005 12:47:05 PM · #6
Originally posted by thatcloudthere:

Originally posted by cpurser:

That's cool.

Some time last year I was looking at Orion with my C5, and a satellite crossed through my field of view. I went and looked up what was moving in that area at that time, and it was an old Russian rocket stage that was still in orbit.

Chad


I was so thrilled the first time I found out that you could see satellites from earth when someone pointed one out to me a few years ago...but this is even more intriguing!

How/Where can I look it up?

Edit: And Scott, can you look up what satellite that was...just out of curiosity...


I used

//www.heavens-above.com

and input the appropriate time to see what was visible in that part of the sky.

Chad
01/13/2005 12:50:24 PM · #7
Originally posted by scalvert:

Pretty cool... for now. I'm sure this is just as much of a novelty today as finding a jet contrail was in a sunset picture 40 years ago. In another 20 years, photographers will be cursing all the satellite trails messing up their astrophotos.


You're exactly right.

In the name of progress, Amen.
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