{"category":"technical","checkin_count":109,"checkins":[{"callsign":"KI0AR","count":11},{"callsign":"KJ5LCO","count":7},{"callsign":"W6RDZ","count":6},{"callsign":"W2JLS","count":4},{"callsign":"K9GRN","count":3},{"callsign":"KF7ADV","count":3},{"callsign":"KJ5PCE","count":3},{"callsign":"KC0EFS","count":2},{"callsign":"KF4WLQ","count":2},{"callsign":"KI7R","count":2},{"callsign":"N5WRW","count":2},{"callsign":"N5ZIQ","count":2},{"callsign":"W9DWT","count":2},{"callsign":"W9EVH","count":2},{"callsign":"W9MKE","count":2},{"callsign":"AB9M","count":1},{"callsign":"AB9MS","count":1},{"callsign":"AB9MZ","count":1},{"callsign":"K0AAS","count":1},{"callsign":"K0AR","count":1},{"callsign":"K2ELB","count":1},{"callsign":"K2IA","count":1},{"callsign":"K6IT","count":1},{"callsign":"K7ADV","count":1},{"callsign":"K7PJB","count":1},{"callsign":"K7RM","count":1},{"callsign":"K9AND","count":1},{"callsign":"K9NOC","count":1},{"callsign":"K9SM","count":1},{"callsign":"KC0PCS","count":1},{"callsign":"KC2TBC","count":1},{"callsign":"KC4ZYC","count":1},{"callsign":"KE0VH","count":1},{"callsign":"KE2FTG","count":1},{"callsign":"KE5CQT","count":1},{"callsign":"KE9AND","count":1},{"callsign":"KF0BLO","count":1},{"callsign":"KF0V","count":1},{"callsign":"KF8FSQ","count":1},{"callsign":"KG5BGO","count":1},{"callsign":"KG7WB","count":1},{"callsign":"KI7PKL","count":1},{"callsign":"KI7RM","count":1},{"callsign":"KI7RON","count":1},{"callsign":"KI7S","count":1},{"callsign":"KJ5IRQ","count":1},{"callsign":"KJ5LC","count":1},{"callsign":"KJ7AGQ","count":1},{"callsign":"KK7E","count":1},{"callsign":"KK7QLW","count":1},{"callsign":"KM6BAY","count":1},{"callsign":"KM6DAY","count":1},{"callsign":"KO5AOK","count":1},{"callsign":"LC9AAT","count":1},{"callsign":"M6V","count":1},{"callsign":"N0ESS","count":1},{"callsign":"N0TH","count":1},{"callsign":"N5ZI","count":1},{"callsign":"NO1S","count":1},{"callsign":"SN5S","count":1},{"callsign":"W2AZ","count":1},{"callsign":"W2CA","count":1},{"callsign":"W2CI","count":1},{"callsign":"W2HAC","count":1},{"callsign":"W6ARE","count":1},{"callsign":"W6RD","count":1},{"callsign":"W6RDO","count":1},{"callsign":"W6RZ","count":1},{"callsign":"WA7GBL","count":1},{"callsign":"WA7GVL","count":1},{"callsign":"WJ9E","count":1}],"club":{"name":null,"profile":null,"slug":"unknown"},"first_detected":"2026-06-30T09:07:22.323637+00:00","found":true,"id":113,"in_progress":false,"last_detected":"2026-07-01T04:20:36.360751+00:00","name":"Anna Net","net_control":"KI5OLG","node_number":"683210","occurrence_count":1255,"profile":{"counts":{"checkins":109,"occurrences":1255,"sessions":200,"transcripts":100},"summary":"Anna Net has 200 detected sessions and 109 callsign check-ins in the public snapshot.","topics":[{"count":1255,"topic":"Weather and General Check-In"},{"count":35,"topic":"Artificial Intelligence Basics and AI Agents"},{"count":16,"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"},{"count":13,"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"},{"count":8,"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"},{"count":7,"topic":"Asteroids and Space Missions"},{"count":7,"topic":"Astronomy and celestial events"},{"count":7,"topic":"Astronomical observations and news for July"},{"count":7,"topic":"Tech-related topics and projects"},{"count":6,"topic":"Astronomy and Night Skies"},{"count":5,"topic":"Astronomical observations and space missions"},{"count":5,"topic":"Health and Wellness"}]},"schedule":"Daily morning","session_count":200,"sessions":[{"end_time":null,"id":65376,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134932,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:43:23.160542+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65374,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134931,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:43:04.062038+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65373,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134930,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:43:02.612657+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65372,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134929,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:42:51.823568+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65371,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134928,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:42:43.218482+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65370,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134926,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:42:19.456957+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65367,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134924,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:41:30.303593+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65366,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134923,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:41:16.364295+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65364,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134920,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:39:55.646623+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65361,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134913,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:37:51.579868+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65359,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134912,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:37:03.912398+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65356,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134909,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:36:33.276362+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65355,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134907,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:35:51.763168+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65319,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134843,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:17:44.536444+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65318,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134869,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:17:37.549672+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65317,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134870,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:17:37.527362+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Exploration"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65316,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134868,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:17:22.594357+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65314,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134865,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:17:04.707062+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65312,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134863,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:16:41.695310+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65311,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134864,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:16:41.061429+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65307,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134860,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:15:55.579513+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space History"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65306,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134859,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:15:21.150298+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space History"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65302,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134856,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:14:38.696825+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space History"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65300,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134853,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:13:53.262234+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space History"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65297,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134833,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:13:12.238469+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"astronomy and space history"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65296,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134852,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:12:56.804004+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"astronomy and space history"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65295,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134849,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:12:41.975150+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Meteor Observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65293,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134845,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:12:06.739476+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Meteorology"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65291,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134848,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:11:55.670798+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Meteorology"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65289,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134844,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:11:26.596090+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Meteor Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65288,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134840,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:10:51.200846+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Tunguska Event"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65287,"participant_count":18,"recording_id":134842,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:10:32.279520+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65284,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134838,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:09:41.031035+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocket Launches"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65283,"participant_count":15,"recording_id":134835,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:09:24.465229+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocket Launches"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65282,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134834,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:09:17.067555+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocket Launches"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65281,"participant_count":14,"recording_id":134832,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:08:55.947711+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocketry Updates"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65280,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134831,"start_time":"2026-07-01T03:08:55.943151+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocketry Updates"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65245,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134794,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:51:38.638136+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space launches, astronomy, and historical events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65244,"participant_count":16,"recording_id":134792,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:50:50.974048+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space and Astronomy News"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65243,"participant_count":9,"recording_id":134793,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:50:50.936014+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space and Astronomy News"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65238,"participant_count":17,"recording_id":134787,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:49:18.369307+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket Reports and Astronomical History"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65234,"participant_count":14,"recording_id":134780,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:47:57.220830+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocket Reports"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65233,"participant_count":15,"recording_id":134782,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:47:48.850865+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocket Reports"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65232,"participant_count":14,"recording_id":134781,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:47:48.850782+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocket Reports"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65231,"participant_count":12,"recording_id":134776,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:47:34.019868+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65230,"participant_count":14,"recording_id":134779,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:47:32.544775+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Rocket Reports"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65229,"participant_count":12,"recording_id":134777,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:47:21.643269+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65228,"participant_count":13,"recording_id":134778,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:47:21.448959+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space launches, Swift Observatory, and asteroid observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65227,"participant_count":9,"recording_id":134775,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:46:48.684290+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65226,"participant_count":5,"recording_id":134772,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:46:13.762391+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65225,"participant_count":5,"recording_id":134769,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:45:34.943665+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65224,"participant_count":5,"recording_id":134770,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:45:34.904143+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65223,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134768,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:45:34.899430+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65222,"participant_count":5,"recording_id":134771,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:45:34.615168+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Rocket launches and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65221,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134762,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:45:07.266999+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space Missions and Asteroid Defense"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65220,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134763,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:45:07.253363+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space Missions and Asteroid Defense"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65219,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134766,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:45:05.511200+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space launches and missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65218,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134764,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:45:04.378009+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space missions and launches"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65217,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134761,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:44:32.741915+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space missions and asteroid impacts"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65215,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134760,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:44:10.723975+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Asteroids, Space Missions, and Planetary Defense"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65186,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134724,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:26:26.613299+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Asteroids and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65182,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134721,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:24:52.799810+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Space launches and missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65181,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134713,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:24:30.715681+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Asteroids and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65180,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134714,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:24:30.567134+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Asteroids and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65179,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134716,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:24:02.916777+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Asteroids and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65178,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134715,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:24:02.440742+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Asteroids and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65177,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134717,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:24:02.368389+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Asteroids and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65176,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134718,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:24:02.367950+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Asteroids and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65169,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134706,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:21:15.976315+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical News and Observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65168,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134707,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:21:15.971559+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical News and Observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65167,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134691,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:20:43.001381+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65166,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134704,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:20:26.576536+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65165,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134697,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:20:26.576422+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65164,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134692,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:20:26.559686+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65162,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134701,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:20:10.215625+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical observations and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65163,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134702,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:20:10.215210+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical observations and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65161,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134693,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:20:10.199947+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical observations and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65160,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134699,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:19:52.880225+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical observations and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65158,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134698,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:19:52.878293+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical observations and space missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65155,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134700,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:19:29.378948+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Space Missions"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65154,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134696,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:19:03.015016+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical observations and celestial events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65153,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134690,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:18:34.386759+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65151,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134687,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:17:33.116109+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65150,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134686,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:17:33.106489+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65149,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134685,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:17:33.058249+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65102,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134634,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:01:29.557145+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65099,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134633,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:00:42.132295+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65098,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134632,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:00:42.043333+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65097,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134629,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:00:18.380161+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65096,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134628,"start_time":"2026-07-01T02:00:18.285753+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65093,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134627,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:59:26.019139+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65092,"participant_count":2,"recording_id":134626,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:59:26.018139+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65090,"participant_count":4,"recording_id":134618,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:57:26.278426+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy and Planetary Observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65089,"participant_count":4,"recording_id":134620,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:57:25.320689+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65088,"participant_count":4,"recording_id":134619,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:57:25.282097+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and Events"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65087,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134615,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:57:01.172957+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy updates and observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65086,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134614,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:56:17.871570+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy updates and observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65085,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134612,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:56:08.680304+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy updates and observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65084,"participant_count":3,"recording_id":134613,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:56:08.579885+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomy updates and observations"}},{"end_time":null,"id":65083,"participant_count":4,"recording_id":134608,"start_time":"2026-07-01T01:55:06.887423+00:00","topics_discussed":{"topic":"Astronomical Observations and News"}}],"topic":"Weather and General Check-In","transcripts":[{"confidence":0.8097461014986038,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:42:29.396038+00:00","id":134222,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134932,"text":"Arkansas with CPC 1100 and a couple other smaller stokes. And also installed a very short link, microwave link down at JFC prior to the shuttle's launch and doing payload bay testing at that location."},{"confidence":0.8218145444989204,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:42:23.369983+00:00","id":134221,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134931,"text":"All right, Mark, I urge you in there, thanks to Checkitin' in tonight. And I'd like to have another one over on YouTube out of New York, Mike up to New York. K-E-2-F-T-G. I appreciate the Checkitin' in over there on YouTube. I'm getting ready to sign. I'll talk just about ready to check out, but I appreciate everybody checking in tonight. This is K-I-2-A-R-73. Thank you."},{"confidence":0.9483232013881207,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:42:06.631859+00:00","id":134220,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134930,"text":"Alright Fred, I'd love to hear that. I appreciate it. I appreciate your comments. I appreciate you checking in tonight. Next on the list, I got a acknowledge Mark, K-C-A-F-U-V, good evening to Mark. Got to check in. What have you got for tonight? Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.8170479089021683,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:42:04.189498+00:00","id":134219,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134929,"text":"Hello Charlie for Zulu Yankee Charlie. Hello Charlie for Zulu Yankee Charlie. Lay check in. Good evening, burners."},{"confidence":0.47593759894371035,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:41:57.853515+00:00","id":134218,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134928,"text":"Okay, quiet night. So, let me end up closing the net a little early. We'll see. But right now, I'll go ahead and open up the net for anybody else. Questions, comments, late check-ins before I go ahead and knock up the net for this evening. If you are a late check-in, please call with your call sign, automatically twice. Anybody else? Questions, comments, late check-ins. Please call. Okay, zero AR now."},{"confidence":0.9773119948804379,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:41:32.065735+00:00","id":134216,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134926,"text":"Well, say good evening and we'll catch you next week in CFSQB."},{"confidence":0.7745610667126519,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:41:04.257180+00:00","id":134214,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134924,"text":"Okay, next on the list is Fred up in Michigan. A F S Q. Fred, what have you got for the next tonight? Go ahead. Oh, hello, Bernice and the rest of the nut. Thanks for being out there. I don't have any traffic. I did want to say thank you for being out there. You really do make my Tuesday afternoon, and I do hear all of the astronomy information and what you have to offer. I just want to say keep it up. I appreciate you. This is KF8F S Q."},{"confidence":0.9044312238693237,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:40:40.928836+00:00","id":134213,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134923,"text":"And if you're ever interested in hosting through your own local repeaters, we could do that too. So definitely check out the site there. And I appreciate that. I will say 73 and look at how this is, KI-0-A-R, I'm clear."},{"confidence":0.9782583937048912,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:39:23.468115+00:00","id":134211,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134920,"text":"pretty bad from what I understand from listening to the scanner on broadcast the fly and here in the reports out in that neck of the woods. But nothing further on this end. Happy 4th of July and look forward to checking next week. KI-0 AR, KC-4, is it a YC?"},{"confidence":0.9282591491937637,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:37:02.586541+00:00","id":134207,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134913,"text":"Okay, and you went by Vant, is that correct?"},{"confidence":0.7043822929263115,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:36:22.648951+00:00","id":134206,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134912,"text":"Thanks for that. I didn't get the call sign. I got a KK5. Well, I don't think I got it right Vance. I do got heard the name there. If you could give me your call phonetically, I'll get you on the list for sure. Go ahead, please. This is Kilo Juliet 5, Papa Charlie Echo. That's Kilo Juliet 5, Papa Charlie Echo."},{"confidence":0.9109279682690448,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:35:41.610155+00:00","id":134203,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134909,"text":"We'll catch you next week. Come in and do an attitude adjustment to the equipment. Here I have to have that done. Okay, self-qv. We'll catch you next week. All. Enjoy the 4th of July weekend. There'll be a lot of stars up there this week, and you see all the flashing lights and flashing sparkles. Don't think there are stars. KZP, QV."},{"confidence":0.8958844617009163,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:35:05.285291+00:00","id":134201,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134907,"text":"Okay, next one. This is Wreckley and Kentucky, KF4, WLQ. Good evening to you, Wreckley. What have you got for the next one? Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.7694332700754916,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:16:57.993167+00:00","id":134166,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134870,"text":"Okay, Dan, KJ5, PCE. Welcome to the K-L-N of the Colorado Astronomy Net. The 10th my name is Ernest, the probably November Echo Sierra Sierra. Appreciate your listening, Anton tonight. So I'm going to make your contact, the last one for the net. If you have been listening and enjoying the net, appreciate that. Tell us a little bit about your interest, background and astronomy, whether you're just starting now, you've been doing it for decades or what have you, or anything else you'd like to pass along to the net, please go ahead and again welcome to the net. Go ahead, Dan. Thank you. Yes, and amateur astronomy. I've got a 12 by 12 roll off roof with a here in southwestern."},{"confidence":0.8064221255481243,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:16:41.167451+00:00","id":134165,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134869,"text":"I have finally, I'm going to reset. I have finally found my replacement telescope. I just have to find one for the right part. It's the edge HD with an equatorial mount, and it'll either be a 925 or an 11. And I'm looking forward to finally finding one for the right price. Anyway, I hope everyone has a good night. W87GGL, Peter Sitchin."},{"confidence":0.8767035473138094,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:16:39.511008+00:00","id":134164,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134868,"text":"All right, be sure to turn into Jack's light to tomorrow night. He's back to support right now. Tomorrow night at 6 p.m. or 6.30 p.m. on my YouTube. Next on the list, let's see, Doug had to check in and out. So go down to Ed. W6RZ, GADQ, and E2-Ed. Again, thanks to the Rocker Report. What have you got for tonight? Go ahead. Thank you. Excuse me, give me a quick call back here. Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.8395017832517624,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:16:24.934678+00:00","id":134161,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134865,"text":"I'm sorry I don't have anything for the net tonight. I'm just listening from across the room. My hands full. I would enjoy the rest of your net. I'm enjoying listening. 887 RJ."},{"confidence":0.8811440616846085,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:16:01.038989+00:00","id":134160,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134864,"text":"This is... Foxtrot, Zira, Quebec. Gilo, Foxtrot, Eight, Foxtrot, Zira, Quebec."},{"confidence":0.7395756262190202,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:15:38.568331+00:00","id":134159,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134863,"text":"Okay, thank you for that, Ed. This is K.I. He's real, AR, neck control for the Colorado Australian Ed. Let's see. Yeah, Ron, I think I acknowledge you. Ron, K.M. 0-V-L. We got Wesley. K.F. 4-W-L-Q. Thanks for checking in tonight. Not a few people stuck out. Here we go. All right, but that's all right. I'll go ahead and I'll put up the net for a couple more seconds before we go down the list. Anyone else, this is your check-in to tonight's Colorado Astronomy Net. Please call with your call sign, phonetically twice."},{"confidence":0.3151663541793823,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:15:10.734989+00:00","id":134156,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134860,"text":"Alright, that's very cool, very cool. Appreciate you sharing that with us. And again, welcome to the net. Alright, it is 9 o'clock. Just to let you know, we meet at 7 p.m. Mountain Times. So that's the 9 p.m. York Times on Tuesday night. And I'd appreciate you checking in tonight to say it. And again, welcome to the net. I'm going to go ahead and wrap up the net for this evening. I'd like to thank the 23 for checking in tonight. Hopefully we'll hear from everybody. Next Tuesday evening for another session of the Colorado Astronomy net. I'd like to thank the Rocky Mountain Radio Lake for using the computer system. Also, I'd like to thank the Sky Hub Lincoln Group for the use of their system as well in all of the different ways that you guys can check in to the net. Please check out the Sky Hub Lincoln dot com. Sky Hub the Lincoln dot com. For more information on that set up."},{"confidence":0.9723174069076777,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:14:19.409104+00:00","id":134155,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134859,"text":"I don't know. That's all I've got observation. I love the Tinguska Stuff Love Jim's article on the early work on that. Very, very fascinating. W6RG Z back to neck control."},{"confidence":0.8688042188684145,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:13:53.215799+00:00","id":134152,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134856,"text":"Okay, good evening to Howard down in Florida. KC4, ZYC. What have you got for tonight, Howard? Go ahead. Yeah, hey, Bernice. KEI-0 AR, and then that KC4 is at YC. Well, not much on this end, unfortunately. We've had some thunderstorms and rain in the area that's kind of obscured the sky, so really haven't done much in the way of star watching as of late. And like everyone else, we're rather hot in the presset here. Sorry to hear about the forest fires out in the ear neck of the woods, and hopefully you'll be able to get them contained. I know the one out by... Oh, I think it was... Grand Junction was..."},{"confidence":0.9208306349240817,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:13:03.900387+00:00","id":134149,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134853,"text":"Let Jack jump in. David, you're almost up next. He just pops off. Go ahead, Jack. Can you still be at your side? Go ahead. Yeah, sorry, Bernie's time was away from the radio for a minute. Yeah, and thanks for letting me jump in. Bernie's just give me a quick phone call at the end of the net. Got some information I need to pass along to you. But anyway, I don't really have anything else. Thanks for the Captain Jack Fuyksen plug earlier. And yeah, we'll be flying tomorrow night from Lisbon to Madeira, Portugal. I go to the ocean in land on a very tricky runway at Madeira, so that'll be fun. Anyway, thanks, Ernest. Back to you and thank you again. T-Zero V-H."},{"confidence":0.7869324684143066,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:12:21.650606+00:00","id":134148,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134852,"text":"So let's go around this off here. So as I say in closing, sometimes it's not maybe what you're looking for in science and exploration that you don't always find precisely what you think you're looking for. But sometimes you get the shadow, the scar, or the echo or the path that you weren't expecting to help you, maybe elucidate better the true threat. Anyway, that's my time for astronomy and space history. Good evening on your ears. Thank you for having me. For the Colorado astronomy net, this is W2JLS, passing it back to KI-0 mission control. Thank you."},{"confidence":0.7083756857448154,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:11:37.543425+00:00","id":134145,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134849,"text":"All right, John, thanks for that. I appreciate you. I'm just bouncing upon a more asteroid day with the ... ... the event for sure, so I'd appreciate that. Now is the time for everyone else to contribute to the net. Questions, comments, observations, or reports anything you'd like to pass along to. First on the list tonight is JackKE 0V8. Good evening to Jack, what have you got for the next night? Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.7758103236556053,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:11:21.268710+00:00","id":134144,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134848,"text":"Thanks, my list is Patrick and Tennessee, K9NOC, good evening to Patrick. Well, who's out for the next slide? Go ahead. Hey, Bernice, K9, knock over here. Just saying I enjoyed the night, turn it in, no traffic. Back to you. Thank you. Thank you."},{"confidence":0.5572890549898147,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:10:29.013539+00:00","id":134141,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134845,"text":"In fact, I can appreciate you staying up late. I do appreciate everybody staying up late with us as well, especially on the East Coast there. I appreciate your comments, appreciate you checking in tonight. Next on the list is Eric over on YouTube. He's up in New York, W2HAC. If you've got anything for us tonight, you can go over on YouTube. He's posted that over there, appreciate you checking in tonight. Next on the list is Ron up in Berkids, K-F-0-B-L-O. Good evening to Ron, what have you got for the next tonight? Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.9449675306677818,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:10:25.188869+00:00","id":134140,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134844,"text":"All right, Roy, hopefully you'll get some managing in. Appreciate your comments. Appreciate you checking in tonight. This is KI-0, ARNAC Control for Colorado Astronomy Net. Next on the list is Ethan Brigley. K2, E-L-B, good evening to Ethan. Again, welcome to the Colorado Astronomy Net. Well, he's out for us tonight. Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.7808376979082823,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:10:00.687209+00:00","id":134139,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134843,"text":"Excellent list is Mike down in Oklahoma over on YouTube. K-O-5-A-O-K. Oh, Mike, if you've got anything for the next day, you can post it over there on the YouTube channel. Appreciate you checking in tonight. Next on the list is Roy up in Oregon. K-I-7, P-K-L, good evening to Roy. What have you got for the next night? Go ahead. Well, a good evening, Bergen, and the next event. Well, I'm happy to say that I found the other part that I was waiting for, so I can put my toes back together. And now we just need some clear skies, and it looks like there might be clear skies coming up next week. Oh, you know, so hot. The forecast is next week. Oh, boy, the next week anyway. Better face to come and a full moon coming anyway. So, hope everybody's enjoying this summer. Have a happy fort, and we will talk to you later."},{"confidence":0.8946415036916733,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:09:54.842117+00:00","id":134138,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134842,"text":"Alright, next on the list is Steve, down in Colorado Springs, KM6-D-A-Y, good evening to Steve. What have you got for the next night? Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.9142365083098412,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:09:48.893000+00:00","id":134136,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134840,"text":"All right Dave, no worries. I appreciate your college. I appreciate you checking it tonight. Let's see, boy, it does the same thing. He checked in as it disappeared for the evening. Well, I'm sorry, I keep going in Texas. So we'll go to Randall. I've been watching the 87-hour day. Good evening to Randall. What do you got for the next night? Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.9441279210150242,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:08:58.609319+00:00","id":134134,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134838,"text":"This is W6R. Do you want me to go ahead, Furnace, or do you want to take that other call?"},{"confidence":0.6494528488679365,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:08:28.072117+00:00","id":134131,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134835,"text":"You can check it in tonight as well. Next on the list is John and Washington over on YouTube. J7-H-G-Q, John over on YouTube. He's got anything for us tonight. You can post that over in the YouTube channel. I'll pass that along. Next on the list is Bruce. In Snyder, Colorado, K-C-0-EFS, could he be too Bruce? What have you got for the next tonight? Go ahead."},{"confidence":0.7469748401393492,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:08:25.573134+00:00","id":134130,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134834,"text":"You bet. Howard, yeah, there was a quite a few injuries. Fortunately, some of us were firefighters, so our house guards go out to... And condolences go out to them and their families for sure. But, yeah, oh, that is an nasty one out there. Howard, stay safe. Appreciate your comments. Appreciate your checking in tonight. So, one more call. Anybody else? Questions, comments? Late check-ins, please call KIs, zero AR now. Net control. This is KJ5, PCE. Vance, and Southwest Park South. Appreciate listening to the stores tonight. I'm sorry for the light checking."},{"confidence":0.8486430086195469,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:08:23.610822+00:00","id":134129,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134833,"text":"set up to do that, but by nighttime they did reach the IFS. They made a couple of contacts there to the International Space Station. That was kind of a cool, very nice. It was really nice just being out there under the night sky. The moon was up and you could see stars and planets. It reminded me I should spend more time outdoors and taking all of that in. Playing radio with friends, it's all time to sort of like where you went tonight in a different way. With that, I'll pass it back. Thanks for having me, Bernice. Enjoyed listening to you and Ed. We'll continue listening to the callers. W2JLS, back to you, sir."},{"confidence":0.911584660410881,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:08:21.478011+00:00","id":134128,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134832,"text":"event and like a lot of years to me it was less radio operating and more you know getting to meet with you know local radio folks that I've known for a few years and a chance to catch up in the human ways but our I was gonna say our our field day activities this year outside and previous years it's been largely inside or obviously antenna and such or or built outside but we actually moved the whole thing to a new location this year was at a church in a nice field outdoors and I'll say it's really nice to experience radio in that way we we had a group set up to look at satellite work and that was very interesting they had a nice little tented area"},{"confidence":0.7647964243910143,"created_at":"2026-07-01T03:08:19.364170+00:00","id":134127,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134831,"text":"Alright Paul, yeah I think a lot of the smoke has moved this way plus we've got a lot of fires over on the my trip to smoke as well here in Colorado so we're going to get double those. Oh, appreciate your college, appreciate you checking in tonight Paul. Next on the list is John and Ohio, W2C, W2C, W2C. I want to add Ohio, W2C, W2C, W2C, W2C. A lot of people are talking about that tonight, go ahead. Hi, it's Joe A.R., W2JLS, hey Bernice. Yeah, I'll mention a couple of days happened this last weekend. I know you sounded like you had maybe something that went on. I think you were alluding to last week's net. Thank you, said you may have had the station up. My local club, Sarah Club here in Northeast Ohio, we participated. I participated in our field day."},{"confidence":0.8166580061827386,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:51:07.530138+00:00","id":134092,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134794,"text":"All right, Randall, appreciate your comments, appreciate you checking in tonight. This is KI's, really, our net control for the Colorado is going to be next. Next on the list is Paul and Utah, WA7GBL. Good evening, Paul. What have you got for the net tonight? Go ahead. You can see everybody. It's 73 degrees here and the smoke has really moved off. I'm not sure which direction the wind is driving it. My daughter lives in Colorado Springs about 10 hours away from Cedar City, Utah, and she's not really fighting with the smoke there. None of the fires have gained much ground control-wise, but luckily it's not smokey here. So that means I get to go out and look at the stars tonight."},{"confidence":0.7764325006441637,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:50:28.692423+00:00","id":134091,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134793,"text":"Group 10-50 from Slick 40 Cape Canaveral. And Saturday July 4, China Catholics hopes to launch a long March 6A rocket with an undisclosed payload from LC9A at the time you want, satellite launch center in China. And lastly, Tuesday July 7 SpaceX is scheduled to launch the Transporter 17 mission from Falcon 9 from Slick 40 Vandenberg Space Force Base. Transporter missions are dedicated right share missions that provide small fan operators the ability to launch up to 50 kilograms to send synchronous orbit for only 350. Analysts think SpaceX will abandon this business over the next few years. We have reached out our repeater there."},{"confidence":0.8451859350590145,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:50:26.877786+00:00","id":134090,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134792,"text":"This is the next R.D. Z, back with the rocket report. This launch, let's see. Again, tomorrow at 20 hundred, Mountain Daylight Times, SpaceX's schedule launch, Starling Group 1745 from Slick 40, Vandenberg Space Force Base, California. Again tomorrow, but at 22, 24, Mountain Daylight Time, United Launch Alliance plans to launch the lab at list 5, attached to Amazon for the Amazon Leo LA08 mission from Slick 41 Cape Canaveral, Florida. Six, launch Thursday, July 2nd, NASA plans to launch a long March 8A rocket from Commercial Pad LC-1 at the Windchang Space Launch Site. The seventh launch Friday, SpaceX is on the docket to launch Starling."},{"confidence":0.7573333531618118,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:48:46.609370+00:00","id":134085,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134787,"text":"All right, Jack, I'll give you a call after the Met. Appreciate your comments. Appreciate you checking in tonight, man. So I'm looking forward to applying with you tomorrow. W6RDZ, go ahead. Ed, what have you got for us tonight? All right, this is W6RD. He said, getting back with you. Not much. I do have observation. I did get out there and look at that strawberry moon last night. I was thinking it was more yellow than strawberry with all of our smoke. That's a local phenomenon. Let's see. Anything else? Oh, I was looking at the planet for that night. Straight up by the moon, I'm not sure exactly what I thought. I'm going to have a study on that. I'm sure Mars was one of them. And then I have one that looked like Jupiter, but it couldn't have been because that's way over by the sun right now. So maybe it was Saturn."},{"confidence":0.8972006533294916,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:47:00.069675+00:00","id":134081,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134782,"text":"In the New York City, it's a cool, it's own life story. I'll just kind of round this out. Don't want to spend too much time. We've been in there a while already today. Cool, it's own story. Did have a rather sad human ending. You know, he had made several trips back to Siberia and studied the sites to help me to find meteorites. And he did. It was a hobby of his throughout his life. But it's something he went back. He returned to the front during World War II. He went and returned to serve and was captured. He became ill and died in captivity in 1942 at the age of 58. So relatively young men. But unusual and kind of neat life in the history of science. So I thought I'd take a moment to reflect on him and his contributions."},{"confidence":0.8747150182724,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:46:57.251801+00:00","id":134080,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134781,"text":"It's not a hunter image, not a crater, not a meteorite, but a forest. It's kind of laying there a bit, you know, all those years later. In a way, cool. He was wrong. Maybe in exactly the way science sometimes needs to be wrong. He kept looking for this thing, you know, to hit the ground, but everything kept pointing back to something different, you know, and that's something different. And eventually, you know, we learned through time and, you know, going back there over the years, it may be not so much that a large metallic body struck the ground, but you had an air burst explosion in the sky. That pattern of, you know, the telegraph pole-like tree pattern, if you've seen the documentary, the described it as kind of like in a butterfly shape. If they've gone back and kind of simulated that with matchsticks, and they were able to reproduce almost precisely what you see on the ground there in Siberia."},{"confidence":0.8645967861468142,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:46:54.238568+00:00","id":134079,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134780,"text":"hanging out in the ground. You know, some bits of cosmic body perhaps fall in there in Siberia. Instead he found something stranger, maybe not quite what he was expecting. And some of you have probably seen this on documentaries, but he found a forest arranged, you know, knocked down across the Tigah. You know, flattened out, we're pointing away from the blast. Seems like I read some plays during my research this week, like telegraph poles strewn from a central point where the blast occurred. So here they weren't just dead, stripped, burned, stripped of the bark and burn, laying flattened, like telegraph poles he said. Kind of."},{"confidence":0.5716890609926648,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:46:52.254547+00:00","id":134078,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134779,"text":"So Leonard Koolik was a Russian meteorologist and meteorite hunter. He came and convinced that something from space had fallen over Siberia. You got to remember at the time you didn't have the media to the extent that we do today. So we were here this guy who is up there in Siberia wanting to kind of get to the bottom of this. 1921 at the age of 24, he tried to reach the site, but the region was so inaccessible that he failed initially. He just couldn't get over it though, he didn't let it go. He made another attempt in 1927, nearly 19 years after the original event, and he reached the blast zone. He was of course looking for a crater or something from space that landed. He expected to find meteorite fragments and imagined a big kelk of iron."},{"confidence":0.7026114761829376,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:46:49.841298+00:00","id":134077,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134778,"text":"One or Koolik. The scientist, the man who chased Tunguska, often the history of astronomy and science. It's involved, particularly with astronomy, in things that we see when we're looking up. Tunguska is more of a story of what happens sometimes when things in the sky come raining down. So, since looking at not the explosion itself, but the detective story that came after it, it's kind of neat. You know, where it landed, Tunguska, it's very remote. And for nearly 21 years, it was really scientific expedition to reach the blast zone. You had this guy Koolik, it's some point steps in."},{"confidence":0.864478299722952,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:46:47.687619+00:00","id":134076,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134777,"text":"and a very happy asteroid day on your ears. Burneth, you may not find this too surprising. I was actually thinking of doing a history tidbit on Tungaska tonight. So a lot of which you covered in your front, was stuff I intended to talk about. So I will still go there, but it'll be a little bit of a different twist. So tonight in astronomy, it's based history. It was planning on taking us back to exactly 118 years ago to the morning of June 30, 1908, and one of the most famous and still strangely haunting events in recorded sky history. As Burneth already covered, a lot of the primary story of Tungaska event, and a lot of additional asteroid-related matters on today, asteroid day. I'll shift gear and focus on."},{"confidence":0.7419605925679207,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:46:45.371143+00:00","id":134075,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134776,"text":"All right, good evening. You've read the ASH-F-S-Qs. Thanks for checking in tonight. All right, now's the time for everyone else to contribute. Oh, yes, before I get started, we're going to jump over to John W2JLS. As John with our astronomical history for today, W2JLS John, would you like to share a historical ticket for today? Go ahead. Very good, Bernice. This is W2JLS John transmitting from Farrow on Ohio. Hello to Mission Control, Mr. Bernice, K-I-2-A-R and Rocketman Ed, W6-R-D-Z, and all the listeners out there on the Colorado-Listronomy net."},{"confidence":0.5502786338329315,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:46:24.772639+00:00","id":134074,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134775,"text":"of 6.1 kilometers per second. The aim was to change its orbit around parrot-aspiric venomous, which it rotates around like the moon or around Earth to test the kinetic impact method of planetary descent. The test proceeded at the 11-hour 55 minutes orbit of gymorpous venomous was short by about 33 minutes, making it the first object in our solar system to have its orbit and its flight human action."},{"confidence":0.4829389480027285,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:45:50.880098+00:00","id":134073,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134772,"text":"Alright Ed, yeah I can take a look at that. I don't think it was Mars or Saturn. The Mars doesn't rise until 3am Saturn, 1am. So Uranus 2pm, up to 8pm. So I'm not exactly sure what type of... So you know full moon's gonna rise right around sunset. So you don't have to look at the sky to see what that was, but it wasn't a planet. Oh, let's see. David check in and check out WEA'd out. So we'll go down to Dave up in Evergreen. Hey, that's your old ass. Good evening, you Dave. What have you got for the head tonight? Good evening, Furnace. I actually don't have much for the head tonight. It covered pretty much everything in the rocket report."},{"confidence":0.5390276573598385,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:45:09.749686+00:00","id":134072,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134771,"text":"we've been astronauts to space them back on the type of round trip it was designed for. The dentist comes roughly four months after NASA released the program investigation team report, classifying William's harrowing journey as a Type A mishap classification that indicates proper damage equal to or greater than $2 million or more. The full article you can read there, several of them in my report links are provided. Alright, that's it for tonight's Colorado Astronomy Rocket Report. This is W6, R-V-V Rocketman Ed wishing you a happy day rather. Good night and nominal flight now back to Starm and Burnts K-I-0 AR, neck control."},{"confidence":0.7213485209892194,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:45:07.835137+00:00","id":134071,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134770,"text":"Whiskey 6 Romeo Delta Zulu back with the tonight rocket report for the Colorado Astronomy Net talk to you about Boeing Starliner. But thanks to persistent issues with thrusters and major helium leak, the capsule stranded the duo in space for nine months and eventually returned without anybody on board. Since then Boeing has continued to struggle to get its act together for over a decade and a half. After it stuck up, it struck up its commercial crew program contract with NASA. As space flight now reports, along the way to follow up to the calamitous flight which won't even stop. Still doesn't have an official launch date and could be as far as a year away. The clock is ticking and the ISS will be retired in a matter of four years which could make the spacecraft obsolete and spending well over two billion on it after failing to ever succeed."},{"confidence":0.9110897001810372,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:45:05.504039+00:00","id":134070,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134769,"text":"The Swift Observatory, Doc and Boost to a higher orbit, extending the Swift mission's science life. The Swift Observatory is falling out of orbit, but NASA and Catalyst Space have a plan for 22 years. The Swift Observatory has been successfully hunting and bagging X-ray and gamma ray bursts, GRB. The launch, it launched with a nominal non-orbit lifetime of two years. The Swift Observatory's three instruments, the BAT, which detects and quickly points the telescope to a GRB. The X-rays telescope and the ultraviolet optical telescope are still working just... ...pager there."},{"confidence":0.7992439270019531,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:45:00.040216+00:00","id":134069,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134768,"text":"I'm going to go ahead and call on Ed. W6RD-Z, which I like to rock a report. So they've been to Ed. Are you ready to give the rock a report? Go ahead. Good evening, Bernard. It's time for me to go with the tonight's rocket report. Just give me a signal check and make sure I'm now wasting everybody's time. Thank you."},{"confidence":0.9484054148197174,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:44:42.355009+00:00","id":134068,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134766,"text":"This was the 12th high-powered digital radio satellite for SiriusXM and it headed to G.S. stationary orbit. All right, approximately 9 launches coming up on the docket, 5 of them in the next 24 hours. Okay, here. I'm going to reset the repeater there."},{"confidence":0.8930413909256458,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:44:37.276395+00:00","id":134067,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134764,"text":"They have been afforded a six-engine static fire. No one's quite sure. Continuous preparing pad, two for a second launch, SpaceX is interleaving the testing of SHIP-13 with SHIP-14. The next two launches are prepping at the same time. All right, I'm gonna do a little shifty there. Okay, that brings us to the second news item. Boeing Starliner won't fly for at least another year. This is from MSM's Victor Taggerman. He reports it's been just over two years since the spacecraft launched the International Space Station with NASA astronauts, butche, Whitmore, and Sonny Williams on board, and May crew, and major technical setbacks. We'll reset the repeater there."},{"confidence":0.8613363375266393,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:44:34.958494+00:00","id":134066,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134763,"text":"Debbie is XRD. He's dead, back with a rocket report. Two items I felt were worth mentioning in the news this week. Of course, Starship Flight 13. SpaceX is working hard to launch another Starship here pretty soon. Flight 13, consisting of the ship 40 for the upper stage and the super heavy booster 20, is expected to launch in the July to August timeframe with an end of July launch possible. July 24 has been floated by some tank watchers, but of course, nothing official yet from SpaceX of course. On Friday, ship 40 performed a successful 15-second single engine static fire on the massive test stand. We get good progress. What was viewed as a brief lighter test on the day before may be"},{"confidence":0.573135495185852,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:44:28.992074+00:00","id":134065,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134762,"text":"decade of renewed orbital life. I'll keep you posted as this mission progresses. Go link, go NASA, go catalyt, catalyst, go swift and go Vegas, go Northrop. And we've got some links there for you to learn more about it in our online report. That brings us to the third launch. Also tomorrow, Wednesday, July 1st at 2026 at 1745 Mountain Standard Time. China Aerospace and Science Corporation, Catholic, plans to launch a long March 4th fee rocket from site 94 at the G Quant Federalized Launch Center in China and it'll be topped with an undisclosed payload. I'm going to go ahead and reset the repeater there."},{"confidence":0.5069185867905617,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:44:14.432793+00:00","id":134064,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134761,"text":"The slide says, for least that, while there is zero risk of any impact now or in the foreseeable future, our planet's gravity could have dramatic effects on a pulpit. The rapid up pulpit is sufficient for space safety or remedies under construction by ESA as Japan. Arrow's phase exploration space at sea or JAXA aims to fly David with a pulpit and a company he asked right during his fly-by to observe how it has worked and changed by our planet's gravity, a pre-extramment offering insights into the internal structure of asteroids in support of planet science. The slide says, for the first time, the"},{"confidence":0.6290838420391083,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:43:42.374328+00:00","id":134063,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134760,"text":"All right, Ed, hopefully I wasn't doing the same. I do see a comment over on that monitor saying my transmission has been breaking up. Kind of hard to understand. At least if you want to go back and listen to that bulletin, you can check out the YouTube recording. So there you go. It should get solid copy over there. You will solid copy into the repeated error. Go ahead, go ahead, Ed."},{"confidence":0.520290207862854,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:25:21.455789+00:00","id":134033,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134724,"text":"Alright, thank you, Rod, thanks for checking in tonight. Alright, this is KI's drill AR net control for Colorado Alright, just give me a second here. I see two of lost by pages. Let me just come up here and see what is open."},{"confidence":0.9368440881371498,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:24:29.055554+00:00","id":134030,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134721,"text":"had its own balloon orbiting in that tackle. Today we know about 15% of the 1.4 billion asteroids discovered today are binary in nature, using one or some two or even three moons."},{"confidence":0.8245160931255668,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:23:39.672674+00:00","id":134027,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134718,"text":"objective is to boost the telescope back to a higher, safer orbit before the observatory falls to Earth. All this for just 30 million. And now it's a hand, handed to startup catalyst, the contract less than a year ago in September of 2025. The Swift Observatory launched in November 20th, 2004 on the Delta II rocket on a $250 million mission to search for the sky for gamma ray bursts and other high energy astrophysics phenomena. That would cost $450 million in today's dollars to replace it. What a party of the observatory for just $25 million. Hopefully, the high risk is the repeater there. Thank you."},{"confidence":0.7467561186187797,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:23:37.937464+00:00","id":134026,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134717,"text":"The heavy six RDS, back with the record report talking about the Swift boost missing. The Swift telescope has never had a propulsion system, so it's doomed to a fiery guess by the end of this year as its orbit continues to delay from trace atmospheric drag at an ever increasing rate. The endeavor, this endeavor is something never attempted in space. The Swift boost mission calls for an untested robotic spacecraft named Link to rendezvous with the Swift observatory in lower Earth orbit and grab a hold of the fragile telescope without damaging it. The Swift telescope was never designed to be serviced, never designed to dock with anything, nor be rebooted. After Link grabs the spacecraft, it will energize its solar powered ion thrusters, the attack will be"},{"confidence":0.4353249304824405,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:23:33.200290+00:00","id":134025,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134716,"text":"It was SpaceX's 653rd successful Falcon 9 mission and the 74th Falcon 9 mission of 2026. The launch was the 151st world over a orbital launch attempt of 2026. In the second launch Friday June 26th at 1143 Mountain Daylight Time Rocket Lab launched the 10-hour of 10 mission on an electron-cury rocket from the Baha'i Peninsula in New Zealand. The mission successfully launched the 10th Strix 8 satellite, a synthetic aperture radar observation, Earth observation satellite, June 8th orbit, patient company perspective will reset the repeater."},{"confidence":0.6999740447191631,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:23:31.566866+00:00","id":134024,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134715,"text":"Thank you, Bernice. I did not hear you breaking up on analog, so maybe it's a digital thing, but that's just what receiver here? Good evening to the net. Good evening, everyone. This is W6RDZ. You're rocket man with tonight's rocket report. We look back a week and we look forward to week. Let's start by looking back. Before launch is this week, a bunch of the ones that were scheduled for the end of the month got pushed forward into July. So on Wednesday, June 24th, it was my birthday, 21.30 Mountain Daylight Time. We're going to reliably launch Starlink Group 17-45 on a Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Space Space Force Base, California. 24 Starlink B2, the high speed internet. It's a sun-synchronous orbit. This was Boosters 10-0."},{"confidence":0.8693527637336116,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:23:07.650970+00:00","id":134023,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134714,"text":"temperature radar, Earth observation satellites going to constellation in lower Earth orbit. It will be the, it was supposed to be the 155th or the launch of 2026 and the 13th of 2026 for rocket labs. So we'll see when they reschedule that. Second launch, this is the big launch of the week I had was hoping to wake up this morning to a news of a successful launch of the Swift Boost mission, but alas, the big launch was postponed until tomorrow morning. So tomorrow, Wednesday, July 1st at zero to three, four to three mountain bay light time. Northrop Grumman will attempt to launch the Swift Boost mission. There, right set our repeaters."},{"confidence":0.8927716713930879,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:23:05.577629+00:00","id":134022,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134713,"text":"W6RD is it, back with the Colorado Astronomy. That's rocket report next week. We've got first launch June 30th at, that's today, at 1900. The lab was scheduled to launch. The grain goddess provides mission on electron curing rocket from the high-business late in New Zealand. However, I just watched it down to that, and that was a scrub. It's been all the way down on a beautiful day there in New Zealand. And the engines started and they scrubbed it after engine starts. So that's always make you hold your breath. No word yet on when they'll try again. This was another launch for Japan's IQPS. This, the IQPS SAR mission, is the 13th of plan 36. It's 36."},{"confidence":0.8476319805933878,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:20:55.567788+00:00","id":134016,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134707,"text":"like the Geluzen impactor coming out of the sun are largely invisible to current survey methods. A new ESA mission proposal called an EO mirror. This slide spot is used to implement visions to pick out by 20 millimeters and 20 meters and larger that cannot otherwise be seen. It's 26th September 2022 impacting an asteroid. If an asteroid was not headed to the sun, what could be done to stop it? NASA's double asteroid redirect test for dark form. The first part of an ambitious international experiment to find out the vending machine size spacecraft impact as a 151 meter dimorphous asteroid out of speed."},{"confidence":0.3073009184815667,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:20:53.603438+00:00","id":134015,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134706,"text":"15th February 2013, a visible impactor. No one saw the cellulose-binsque meteor coming with after sunrise on a comet's sunny winter's day, a 20-meter asteroid struck the atmosphere over zero amounts of Russia at a speed of more than 18 kilometers per second. The relatively small rock approached Earth from very near the direction of the sun exploding and the atmosphere and creating a shockwave that damaged thousands of buildings, breaking windows and turning around 15-100 people from flying charges left. It was the largest asteroid to strike Earth since Tyszka. Workin' with NASA's Century System had astronomers around the globe. He had a near-Earth coordination center of monitors, and his outlet had this. He's evaluated to threat-post-myposities that come near Earth, but asteroids are a very small part of the Earth."},{"confidence":0.7805667519569397,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:20:00.673231+00:00","id":134013,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134704,"text":"This is Kilo Foxtrot Zero, Victor Leemers. Kilo Foxtrot Zero, Victor Leemers, Oscar, Ron N versus."},{"confidence":0.9673594165651593,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:19:31.241971+00:00","id":134012,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134702,"text":"W-6, are these it, back with the rocket report. We were talking about the Swiss Boost Mission Act coming up tomorrow morning, the last of the kind, Taylor XL rocket, and that's launched from beneath the wing of Alaska, it's kind, 1974, Lockheed 10-11, start a test that's launching from Ronald Reagan, the list of missile defense tests site in the islands in the Pacific. It will be the 46th mission for the venerable Pegasus rocket and the last ever. This is just the coolest mission. It's a real tail-marry by NASA on a shoestring budget and an impossibly short project timeline, catalyst space tech technology, built a spec servicing spacecraft named Link, that will rendezvous with NASA's doom."},{"confidence":0.4772339500486851,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:19:28.589326+00:00","id":134011,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134701,"text":"And these will be completed in spring and next year that undergo testing at ESA's ES and TEC technical center in the Netherlands before launch funding a free rocket in spring to 2028, along with Jackson's Destiny and M plus mission which will also perform a preliminary public law by a Republic. 2029, International Year of Asteroid Awareness and Planetary Defense in recognition of the potential of this flood by a Republic education to the United Nations has been designated 2029 as the International Year of Asteroid Awareness and Planetary Defense. And find out more about Asteroid's 2029 year at ESA's European Space Station. And that's it for the bulletin for this evening. This is KI's NERoy on that control of the Colorado"},{"confidence":0.7494963175720639,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:19:11.547997+00:00","id":134010,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134700,"text":"W6RD-Z, back with the rocket report, finishing the report on the second launch, which was the rocket lab's inspectors launch and OWL of VAN mission. It was the 91st electron mission and the 11th of 2026. Sunday, June 28th, SpaceX launch Starling Group, 17-40 on a Falcon 9, lifting off from Vandenberg Space Force Base at 10-09 Mountain Daylight Time. 24 Starling V2 minutes joined the mega constellation and Sun St. Chris orbit. It was the 75th Falcon 9 mission of 2026. Last launch, mostly, Sunday, June 28th at 2025, by Time Space X, successfully launched the XSM 11 mission from Slickland."},{"confidence":0.3862263262271881,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:18:59.765476+00:00","id":134009,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134699,"text":"of Saturn. Another challenge, especially at 1970, Neptune is kind of a blueish, darkish planet with a little bit of green in it. So that's a greenish blue. Wow, Uranus is a blueish green. You'll definitely see those colors. So our Clark planet's got series rising about 4.59 am on the 1st, about 2.41 am on the 1st. The series could be spotted low to the southeast in the morning as guys before sunrise. The Earth's most important part is shining at 92.9.0."},{"confidence":0.8865553074412875,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:18:58.214874+00:00","id":134008,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134698,"text":"The six are the Z-Vec with the Rocky Roar report talking about the SWIFT Boost mission. Once in orbit, Link will deploy its solar panels in undergo several weeks of commissioning as catalysts evaluate the spacecraft's propulsion, navigation, and sensor systems. Link will then slowly approach and survey SWIFT before grabbing the observatory with its robotic arms and then slowly raising the orbit by nearly 370 miles. When SWIFT launched in 2004, it went into a 580 kilometer orbit. SWIFT is slowly decay due to the very tenuous atmospheric drag in lower orbit down to 360 kilometers. NASA is shooting to boost to a fresh altitude of 740 kilometers this time. That should give the SWIFT several better"},{"confidence":0.5697827711701393,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:18:45.411866+00:00","id":134007,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134697,"text":"return by Hera, starting with the first image of the transformed cyborgist on sale on 25 November should let researchers turn the kinetic impact method into a well understood and costable method of planetary defense should we ever be this for real 13 April 2029 of this day a future red letter day for asteroids when the cruise liner flies up over asteroid passes will pass last then 32,000 kilometers per search visible to the naked eye for more than 2 billion people across parts of Europe Africa and Asia coming ten times closer to Earth than the moon and many satellites"},{"confidence":0.6405611753463745,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:18:43.854281+00:00","id":134006,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134696,"text":"25 November, 2026 here comes Hera. Dark Impact was observed across Earth as the dust and debris had liberated cost of Dimorphous to bright more than ten holes, but many unknown things, including the precise structure and mass of Dimorphous and how the impact changed the small body. This is left with a massive crater or reshaped entirely by the force of the cool agenda. Excuse me, has it been left with a massive crater or reshaped entirely by a force of collision? Lost in October 2024, ESA's Heramission is designed to find out and equipped with an asteroid deck of instruments plus two shoebox-shaped box size epsace that fly closer to the asteroid's surface than their van size and mothership today."},{"confidence":0.8320510557128323,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:18:39.213792+00:00","id":134005,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134693,"text":"Kavn Naya, Tunguska River. And unfortunately, sparsely populated province of Siberia, an incoming object exploded resulting in a 3 to 5 megaton air burst. Tunguska event toppled around 60 million trees across 1,200 square kilometers of territory. Yeah, but upright telegraph forage of tree trucks remaining at the air burst. It struck only a short rotation of Earth away from Europe. The results would have been to the next to over a populated area."},{"confidence":0.9481527768075466,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:18:18.145395+00:00","id":134004,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134692,"text":"all heavily traded. It fast became clear that collisions are fundamental to the nature and history of asteroids and by expected the entire solar system."},{"confidence":0.833696258695502,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:18:17.614835+00:00","id":134003,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134691,"text":"to operate for another six days, and then to the next day. Five September 2008 Rosetta's Asteroid fly-by. New York's first close-up counter was an asteroid took place at ESA's Rosetta's spacecraft, at the Science Asteroid on the way to the other feet. Sure, you lost your arse of an ankle. This is your browser size. The diamond-shaped body turned out to be scarred by dozens of impact craters, including one gaping hole at its south pole, a large impact crater about just kilometers wide and nearly 300 meters deep. The second close on the counter took place in 2010, as Rosetta passed the BAMF 100 kilometer diameter in this case, and the other two times bigger than Rosetta's target. banker, all"},{"confidence":0.665637344121933,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:18:14.905307+00:00","id":134002,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134690,"text":"So, we are going to talk about the last one landing on an asteroid. Many asteroids have made it to Earth based on geological record, but this date was the first time a first settled on an asteroid. NASA is a near-or near-Earth asteroid rendezvous, a shoemaker spacecraft, spent more than a year surveying the peanut-shaped 4-3-3 arrows. A near-Earth asteroid whose orbit brings it close to our planet, its survey revealed a surprisingly rich surface, featuring craters, dust ponds, and house-sized boulders. Then came the end of the mission on 12 February controllers performed. The first spacecraft's touchdown on an asteroid. The spacecraft's transmitted 69 close-up images during its final descent and continued."},{"confidence":0.4577380657196045,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:17:15.729080+00:00","id":133999,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134687,"text":"but several grains were lent to ESA for analysis. On a parallel trajectory, high-aproosive first up in the atmosphere, but successor spacecraft high-aproosive 2 succeeded in returning 5.4 grams of material from the typical carbonaceous asteroid, and we used it in 2020. Now, the OSIRIS-REx mission also brought that material from asteroids, and both missions remain operational. High-aproosive is brought to the former flyby of asteroids today, next week while the OSIRIS-REx renamed OSIRIS-8X, to do to run a few with a poposis asteroid in 2025. NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology"},{"confidence":0.8040222051468763,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:17:13.358395+00:00","id":133998,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134686,"text":"that sailed to land instead of drifting off into space, demonstrating the change in the traffic in the asteroid traveling. Even so, Hayabusa detached its reentry capsule at a distance of about 300,400,000 kilometers from Earth, allowing the capsule to coast on a ballistic trajectory until it re-enters Earth's atmosphere to capsule experience a deceleration of about 25 G, and at 80 G, it's about 30 times so experienced by the Apollo Space Time. It landed via parachute in the air, World War I, Australia on 14 June 2010. When it turned out to be an extremely small amount of asteroids and perils, which was really small amount of asteroids and perils, 15 hundred microscopic dust grains, which scientifically"},{"confidence":0.6791743508407048,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:17:10.987968+00:00","id":133997,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134685,"text":"With this, KI-0 AR, that control took a lot of us on a minute continuing. 14-2-2-0 can asteroid sample return. Launched in 2003, Japan's high-aboos emissions had the end. This is goal of returning material to birth from potato-shaped 300 and 30-meter-meter asteroid, heat to kawa, named for the Japanese for power. Falcon, high-aboos was a near crippled spacecraft by the time it reached its death. Plastered by our solar flare controllers were reduced to relying on one reaction wheel and two chemical thrusters to maintain attitude control as the spacecraft made repeated touchdown off of the asteroid's surface together material. High-aboos was doubled by elite thrusters, communications, lockouts on small lanterns."},{"confidence":0.28701193332672115,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:00:18.986086+00:00","id":133952,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134634,"text":"45pm on the 1st after the 2nd. People return to the morning sky, rising about 5.49am by month. By the time the sun sets Jupiter is low and the western sky rapidly approaching the horizon, they're the first couple of weeks of the month. That's what the sun is getting to see that once it gets any lower. It's going to be lost in the evening twilight glow. Jupiter is in the constellation of cancer, shining at magnitude minus 1.8. We've got Saturn rising about 104am on the 1st, about 11pm on the 1st. And we'll look for Saturn towards the south in the morning sky before the sun rises. Saturn is in the constellation of Pisces, shining at magnitude 0.7. The Earth is now in the sun. It's a very beautiful day. It's a very beautiful day. It's a very beautiful day. It's a very beautiful day. It's a very beautiful day. It's a very beautiful day. It's a very beautiful day. It's a very beautiful day. It's a very beautiful day."},{"confidence":0.8243486777595852,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:00:14.752518+00:00","id":133951,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134633,"text":"and I'll acknowledge when I get a break. Okay, I just rely on that control for the Colorado astronomer net. Let's see, where were we? Oh yeah, I did. Bars. I got a bunch of construction from Uranus. Oh, I think it was in the early late hours of the 3rd Friday night for those of us. And I was looking in the Denver area. And about 11 p.m. and we'll be looking at their closest. Oh, definitely. I'll get those. If you never spot Uranus, you'll see a little greenish food. Blueish green. Or green and blue. Right next to Mars. On Mars, we'll be shining at a magnitude of 1.3. We've got Jupiter, we'll be in conjunction with the sun on the 29th. It's sort of such a time."},{"confidence":0.7430551757033055,"created_at":"2026-07-01T02:00:12.213100+00:00","id":133950,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134632,"text":"Okay. We're made a fifth. Or made a fifth, I would say. R2D2 is checking in tonight. Maybe that was it. Otherwise, for those of you who are out there listening, please hold off until I call back in. I'll take seconds after I get through the astronomical news of the... This section of the program I will call. This is a directed net. So I will call for check-in, so a little bit later. But please hold them. I will take check-in via or YouTube if I happen to see your call pop up on either one of those. But I will see that and post that."},{"confidence":0.2847357988357544,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:59:47.441902+00:00","id":133947,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134629,"text":"Thanks for watching!"},{"confidence":0.7111316740512847,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:59:40.670887+00:00","id":133946,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134628,"text":"Okay, let's try that again. Give me a second. I heard a big deal of my phone and it blew out for some reason. And then I flipped it over to the analog side. I'm on the wires axe right now. I switched it over on the analog and cut the tail end of something. So I'm going to go and switch it. Because I know I missed probably a couple of check-ins there. So give me a sec. I'm going to QS Y and I'll call for check-ins again."},{"confidence":0.4670556578785181,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:59:03.838923+00:00","id":133945,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134627,"text":"of rock. 12 km diameter, Gaspra shows that they are in fact complex geological world in their own right with very irregular shapes and abundant geological features. The Stoney asteroids irregular shape, sharp edges and plentiful grooves. Not probably evidence of fractures. I suggested it was the product of one or more collisions. It also had a striking abundance of small craters, much greater than on other bodies and also showed evidence of land flight. Despite Gaspra's extremely low gravity, the historic asteroids turned out to be much more dynamic. I think anyone had previously imagined. Galileo went on to this. This is a second asteroid, it's high down in 1993, where it made it to the discovery."},{"confidence":0.40432120561599727,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:59:01.579892+00:00","id":133944,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134626,"text":"It was your closely indirectly touched by Tungusco with atmospheric pressure waves and seismic tremors recorded and strange illumination in the sky. Despite the Titanic nature of the Tungusco explosion, it took more than a decade for the site to be investigating all moments and the damage done by the event remains unmistakable. At 21, I think we want first asteroid encounter the Hanoi as well into the state base before the first asteroid visited by a spacecraft. NASA's Galileo mission passed 1,600 kilometers away from the gas trough. Asteroid on the way to Jupiter. Before the head, astronomers observing through telescopes thought asteroids might simply be unchanging chunks of the Earth."},{"confidence":0.6224112280390479,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:57:02.555823+00:00","id":133939,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134620,"text":"away from it. The whole moon sub-10 angle of about one half of a degree. So this is very, very close. You never see Uranus through telescope. This would be the time to get out and see that. So that will actually be at about 11 a.m. On the third for those of us here in the Denver area or earlier for those of us here. So, definitely avail yourself. Stay up late on the third. Celebrate the fourth just a little bit early. Thank you."},{"confidence":0.5848120323249272,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:57:00.938049+00:00","id":133938,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134619,"text":"However, definitely take a look at those brighter objects with binoculars or it's also for sure. And you'll pull out all the details of those objects banding on Jupiter's boots, and then you'll see that the binoculars and scanning the Milky Way will pull out all the details of the picture. Mars is rising about 3.07 am on the first, about 2.24 am on my front end. It looks for Mars to the southeast in the morning. About 30 minutes before sunrise, Mars will be in conjunction with Uranus. About 1 am eastern daylight time off the 4th will be about 1.10 of 1.30."},{"confidence":0.4324561357498169,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:56:59.039720+00:00","id":133937,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134618,"text":"Alright, I forgot to do my quick tutorial on magnitude scale and an inverse logarithmic scale, meaning as the magnitude goes up, the apparent brightness of an object increases by a factor of about 2.5. The simplest object that the human eye can see under optimal conditions is dark and dark and slow away from the city without all that smoke in the air as well. About 6 magnitudes. Any magnitudes less than 6 are visible with the naked eye. So a magnitude 5 object is 2.5 times brighter than a magnitude 6 object, while a magnitude 7 object is 2.5 times dimmer. That definitely requires vernaculars or telescopes to see anything greater than 6."},{"confidence":0.9467536211013794,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:56:40.472457+00:00","id":133936,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134615,"text":"Finally, Mercury rounds the sun and reappears in the morning sky in the last few days of the sun. I excerpt this from Astronomy Magazine July 26, page 34."},{"confidence":0.48307127058506016,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:55:43.222487+00:00","id":133935,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134614,"text":"This won't break. You can pick it up, you can write on it, do whatever. It shows us, and it will give you a nice path to the nice guy. You know how to use Starcharts, a nice path of the ISS across the sky. This one is on the 7th, so 947, so about 957. I've been from Horizon, Horizon passing through. Passing by the constellation of Virgo through the Como-Barrant Icy through Draco. I'm an atheist and I'm an aesthetic towards the North East. So again, that website www.heavastad.com. Thanks for watching."},{"confidence":0.3988869249820709,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:55:41.069719+00:00","id":133934,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134613,"text":"It will give me ISS passes, the visible ISS passes for the next 10 days, and it will give me all of the ISS passes. All of the other things that I'm seeing that just go over. From the Denver area, it's kind of transitioning from early morning to late evening passes, all very, very low towards the start. Looking in the next 10 days for a decent pass, and I'm not seeing one until like July 7th. So I'm going to post that over on a YouTube. I'm sure you would say what happened to me. It's a nice start chart. Print out and take outside with the opposed to a small iPhone screen or an iPad screen or something like that. I'd have to be better, but if you drop it,"},{"confidence":0.8646285141056234,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:55:38.750670+00:00","id":133933,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134612,"text":"Here we go. This is K-I-Z-A-R-Nectonrol for Colorado, Australia. Start off with I-S-S-PAPAs. The I-S-S-PAPAs uses this tape. It's www.heavenstag.com. www.heavenstag.com. Sign up for it. I've got that posted over on YouTube. Sign up for your home coordinates. It's much more accurate timing for the I-S-S-PAPAs. This is just one of the features of the particular site. The one reason I like about this site is"},{"confidence":0.9162116567293803,"created_at":"2026-07-01T01:54:31.212841+00:00","id":133929,"node_number":"683210","recording_id":134608,"text":"and the letter is not put to the set. Pretty much it for the local astronomical moves for, you know, coming weeks. This is the K9. They are in control for the Colorado astronomer. I'll go ahead and pause here for more check-ins. We've got Patrick, K9, and the K9. And we've got Eric W2, A-Z, and the V-A-U-2. So thanks for that, Eric. We've got you all good for tonight. And we're going to go ahead and do tonight. Colorado is drawing at the call with your call sign, phonetically twice. This is you."}]}