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All right, we're just looking at visible passes over the Denver area. For the Denver area, they're all morning passes. And what I like to do is I pull up this nice star chart of the path of the ISS over the area. And you can see it go through those constellations and see the timings of it where it want to be relative to what's up in the night skies. You could print that out, take it outside, check it out. And a nice 8 and 1 by 11 sheet of paper for that. Again, I do recommend you sign up for and put in your home coordinates right there for my location. And then you get more accurate readings as well for the timing and positioning of the ISS. It has a whole lot more as well. The Starlink orbits, it's got a lot of the other satellites that you can check out as well, amateur radio satellites as well. So check that site out again, www.heavens-above.com. And that's it for that bulletin. This is KI0AR net control for the Colorado Astronomy Net. This is repeater station kilo kilo 7, November, Quebec. Oh, let's see. Oh, let's see. Who was that? Michael had asked about that, got interested in astronomy by wondering what the 3I Atlas was. The worm is actually from spaceweather.com. The non-gravitational acceleration of 3I Atlas When non-experts have non-gravitational evaporation, some think it means the interstellar object must be a spaceship. Not so. All comets have non-gravitational evaporation.
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