http://www.space.com/spacewatch/iridium_flares_040521.html

A while back I received an inquiry from Craig Allen, a broadcast
meteorologist in New York:

"I just thought you�d be interested in a rather unusual sky
observation that I made recently from Nassau County (Long Island). I
was walking my dog around 10 o�clock at night and was looking up, when
I saw an ordinary-looking star that became incredibly bright.

"I do remember thinking I was witnessing the death of a star . . .
some kind of supernova so far away that it was only a small burst of
light. In fact, for a few moments, I thought it might even have been
brighter than Venus; the brightness went up, then ramped down . . .
eventually getting so dim that I couldn�t see it anymore.

"The whole thing from fade-up to fade-down probably lasted no more
than 15 or 20 seconds. Any idea what I saw?"

What Allen fortuitously saw was an "Iridium flare," caused by one in a
new fleet of satellites that have been put into Earth orbit over the
past several years; satellites that can briefly appear to flare to
incredible brilliance.

And you can spot them, too, especially if you take the time to find
out when they're likely to occur.

Space mirrors

An Iridium communication satellite's Main Mission Antenna is a
silver-coated Teflon antenna array that mimics near-perfect mirrors
and are angled at 40-degrees away from the axis of the body of the
satellites. This can provide a specular (direct) reflection of the Sun
�s disk, periodically causing a dazzling glint of reflected sunlight
from their 492 mile-high orbits.

At the Earth's surface, the specular reflection is probably less than
50-miles wide so each flare can only be viewed from a fairly small
area.

Iridium satellites normally traverse the sky on the edge of
visibility, at +6 magnitude. On this astronomer's scale, smaller
numbers represent brighter objects. Venus outshines all stars and
planets at magnitude -4.

Iridium satellites can provide reflective flares of magnitude -9.
That's up to 100 times brighter than Venus, based on how the
brightness scale works. The flares can last anywhere from 5 to 20
seconds before the satellite once again becomes almost invisible to
the naked eye.

In fact, it is even possible to see such flares during the daytime, if
you know exactly where to look.

Where to look

If you wish to see such brief flares for yourself, you will first have
to know your exact latitude, longitude and local time zone. Then, log
on to a web page that will tell you when the next Iridium flares can
be seen. One such site is Heavens Above, hosted by the German
Aerospace Center (also known as DLR).



This site and others also provide viewing information for the
International Space Station, the Hubble Space Telescope and other
satellite.

A bit of caution: Not all Iridiums flare according to the predicted
schedules. Some of the Iridium satellites are either tumbling or
otherwise not operational so their future movements cannot be reliably
predicted. A fully operational satellite should be orbiting the Earth
at 14.34 revolutions per day.

You may wonder why are the satellites called "Iridium?" It has
absolutely nothing to do with the metallic element that occurs in
platinum ores. Originally, it was conceived that a total of 77 Iridium
communication satellites would be placed into Earth orbit. Since the
atomic number for Iridium is 77, a satellite constellation's name was
conceived.

In reality, a total of 88 satellites were launched between May 5, 1997
and June 11, 1999. Five additional more were launched on February 11,
2002. Typically, the expected lifetime of a satellite is 5 to 8 years.

******************************************************************

http://www.heavens-above.com/ is a pretty neat site.



xponent

77 Maru

rob


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