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#1
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Last night I saw an extremely bright point of light in the sky. I'm in
London and this light was to the East. Could anyone help me to identify it? It was really amazingly bright. -- message by the incredible Robin May. "The British don't like successful people" - said by British failures Who is Abi Titmuss? What is she? Why is she famous? http://robinmay.fotopic.net |
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On 26 Aug 2004 22:36:57 GMT, Robin May
wrote in : Last night I saw an extremely bright point of light in the sky. I'm in London and this light was to the East. Could anyone help me to identify it? It was really amazingly bright. What time? Venus is generally the brightest but it stays relatively close to the sun (obviously). There are websites out there that will recreate the sky for you at a given position at a given time, but I don't have a reference offhand. Was it staying fixed relative to the other stars? If not, it was likely the International Space Station, which is rather bright (I saw it a couple of times after dusk, waiting for a bus in Whetstone) and will drop out of view in 5-15 minutes depending on the sun angle. -- Ivan Reid, Electronic & Computer Engineering, ___ CMS Collaboration, Brunel University. Room 40-1-B12, CERN KotPT -- "for stupidity above and beyond the call of duty". |
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Dr Ivan D. Reid wrote in uk.transport.london on Thu, 26 Aug 2004
23:13:48 +0000 (UTC) : If not, it was likely the International Space Station, which is rather bright (I saw it a couple of times after dusk, waiting for a bus in Whetstone) Did it have an Oyster card, then? SCNR -- nice (adj) - often used in vague commendation by those who are not nice (Chambers 20th Century Dictionary) |
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On Fri, 27 Aug 2004 18:13:55 +0100, Dave Hillam postmaster@[
wrote in : Dr Ivan D. Reid wrote in uk.transport.london on Thu, 26 Aug 2004 23:13:48 +0000 (UTC) : If not, it was likely the International Space Station, which is rather bright (I saw it a couple of times after dusk, waiting for a bus in Whetstone) Did it have an Oyster card, then? heh! No, this was 2002, before Oyster was yer choice ter[1]. [1] http://www.joelmartin.com/quotes/datfiles/off/limerick According to experts, the oyster In its shell - a crustacean cloister - May frequently be Either he or a she Or both, if it should be its choice ter. -- Ivan Reid, Electronic & Computer Engineering, ___ CMS Collaboration, Brunel University. Room 40-1-B12, CERN KotPT -- "for stupidity above and beyond the call of duty". |
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In message , Dave Hillam
] writes Dr Ivan D. Reid wrote in uk.transport.london on Thu, 26 Aug 2004 23:13:48 +0000 (UTC) : If not, it was likely the International Space Station, which is rather bright (I saw it a couple of times after dusk, waiting for a bus in Whetstone) Did it have an Oyster card, then? Sometimes, just sometimes, something appears on here which makes me roar out loud. This is one of those occasions. Thank you! :-)))) -- Ian Jelf, MITG, Birmingham, UK Registered "Blue Badge" Tourist Guide for London & the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
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Robin May wrote the following in:
Last night I saw an extremely bright point of light in the sky. I'm in London and this light was to the East. Could anyone help me to identify it? It was really amazingly bright. Oh dear, how embarassing. I posted this to the wrong newsgroup. Sorry about that. -- message by the incredible Robin May. "The British don't like successful people" - said by British failures Who is Abi Titmuss? What is she? Why is she famous? http://robinmay.fotopic.net |
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Robin May writes:
Oh dear, how embarassing. I posted this to the wrong newsgroup. Sorry about that. You meant to post it to a *different* newsgroup that it would have been off-topic for? -- Mark Brader | "[Jupiter's] satellites are invisible to the naked eye Toronto | and therefore can have no influence on the Earth | and therefore would be useless | and therefore do not exist." -- Francesco Sizi |
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On 26 Aug 2004, Robin May wrote:
Last night I saw an extremely bright point of light in the sky. I'm in London and this light was to the East. Could anyone help me to identify it? It was really amazingly bright. The second coming. THERE. tom -- Like Kurosawa i make mad films; okay, i don't make films, but if i did they'd have a samurai. |
#9
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JRS: In article , dated Thu,
26 Aug 2004 22:36:57, seen in news:uk.transport.london, Robin May posted : Last night I saw an extremely bright point of light in the sky. I'm in London and this light was to the East. Could anyone help me to identify it? It was really amazingly bright. For how long did you see it, and at what altitude was it? If it was fairly low, it could well have been heading for Heathrow; I often see them from here, with no apparent movement for a minute or so, at a magnitude in the -5 to -10 region. They usually twinkle or jitter a little. -- © John Stockton, Surrey, UK. Turnpike v4.00 MIME. © Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQqish topics, acronyms & links; some Astro stuff via astro.htm, gravity0.htm; quotes.htm; pascal.htm; &c, &c. No Encoding. Quotes before replies. Snip well. Write clearly. Don't Mail News. |
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fOn Fri, 27 Aug 2004 17:57:41 +0100, Dr John Stockton
wrote in : JRS: In article , dated Thu, 26 Aug 2004 22:36:57, seen in news:uk.transport.london, Robin May posted : Last night I saw an extremely bright point of light in the sky. I'm in London and this light was to the East. Could anyone help me to identify it? It was really amazingly bright. For how long did you see it, and at what altitude was it? If it was fairly low, it could well have been heading for Heathrow; I often see them from here, with no apparent movement for a minute or so, at a magnitude in the -5 to -10 region. They usually twinkle or jitter a little. That was my later thought. I also used to see bright lights in the sky, waiting for a bus at Arnos Grove[1], and it took me a couple of sightings (more realistically, the first significant wait for a bus!) to realise they were moving. From here (Cowley) I often see a string of 5 or 6 spread out to the east when I walk home after dark. [1] Obligatory ambiguous phrase yet again. -- Ivan Reid, Electronic & Computer Engineering, ___ CMS Collaboration, Brunel University. Room 40-1-B12, CERN KotPT -- "for stupidity above and beyond the call of duty". |
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