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This is KI0AR net control for Colorado Astronomy Net. Alright, so we finished the local astronaut analysis. We'll get into the bulletins for this evening. Got an interesting bulletin for you in just a minute. It's going to make you scratch your head and think a little bit. But for right now, I'm going to go ahead and post ISSs, at least over the Denver area. I like this particular website, www.heavens-above.com. And if you're looking at it over on YouTube, you'll notice most of the ISS passes are in early morning hours before sunrise. We do have an interesting nice high pass coming up on November 2nd over the Denver area. At 5.13 a.m., the ISS travels from the northwest to the southeast, peaking about 87 degrees above the north-north-right. Nearly overhead pass. And I'm going to pull up that particular pass and show you one reason I like this particular website, is I can get a nice star chart of that particular pass over the Denver area. I do recommend that you guys do sign up for that and log into it, and then you can put in your home coordinates, get much better timings and more accurate timings and passes for locations there. For a lot more than just ISS passes, you can check that website out. www.heavens-above.com. You can print out a nice eight and a half by eight there, and take that outside with you as opposed to trying to figure out where it is with an iPhone or even an iPad. It won't be too bad, but an iPhone or something with your cell phone is kind of difficult to try to figure out where that ISS is. But this gives you a nice hard copy representation of that particular pass. Again, the website www.heavens-above.com. And that's it for that bolt, and this is KI0ARNet control for the Colorado Astronomy Net.
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