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All right, no worries, I will be able to do that report. Go ahead and get into the bulletins for this evening. For those of you who are interested in ISS passes, you may want to check out this particular website www.heavens-above.com. That is www.heavens-above.com. I just posted that on a ... It is kind of out of line there. What I like about this website is you can click on ... Let's see, I do recommend you sign up, log in, and put in your home coordinates. You get better, more accurate information when you do that. What I like about this website is I can click on a particular pass. Here I am clicking on October 7th. I get a nice start chart. I can see where the ISS is passing relative to the stars in the sky. It gives it a start position and its ending position. In this case, on the 27th, it is starting at 2023 in the evening and finishing about 2028 in some odd seconds there. A relatively long pass, disappears into the earth's shadow near its peak. It is one of the better ones over the Denver area for the next upcoming week. It was 2025 on the 27th. The ISS travels from the west-northwest to the south-southwest, peaking about 69 degrees above the southwest horizon and disappears about 10 seconds after it peaks. You can see that in the timing for those passes. Again, that website is www.heaven-above.com. That is it for that bulletin. This is KI0AR net control for the Colorado Astronomy Net.
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