Return-path: X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 7997;andrew.cmu.edu;Ted Anderson Received: from hogtown.andrew.cmu.edu via trymail for +dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr11/tm2b/space/space.dl@andrew.cmu.edu (->+dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr11/tm2b/space/space.dl) (->ota+space.digests) ID ; Tue, 25 Jun 91 05:15:28 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: Precedence: junk Reply-To: space+@Andrew.CMU.EDU From: space-request+@Andrew.CMU.EDU To: space+@Andrew.CMU.EDU Date: Tue, 25 Jun 91 05:15:23 -0400 (EDT) Subject: SPACE Digest V13 #709 SPACE Digest Volume 13 : Issue 709 Today's Topics: Vote on Space Station Re: RFD: talk.politics.space space news from April 15 AW&ST Re: Self-sustaining infrastructures Re: orbiter production Re: space news from April 15 AW&ST NASA Prediction Bulletins, Part 1 Administrivia: Submissions to the SPACE Digest/sci.space should be mailed to space+@andrew.cmu.edu. Other mail, esp. [un]subscription requests, should be sent to space-request+@andrew.cmu.edu, or, if urgent, to tm2b+@andrew.cmu.edu ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 6 Jun 91 23:56:09 GMT From: prism!mailer.cc.fsu.edu!geomag!cain@gatech.edu (Joe Cain) Subject: Vote on Space Station The House passed the Chapman/Lowery amendment with the following vote: Yea Nea Democrats 107 144 Republicans 133 7 Independent 1 Totals 240 173 Thus the space station is to be funded at about $1.9 billion, and maybe about $1.6 billion it was said would come from other NASA projects including about $500 from Space Science. As noted earlier, the bottom lines will be drawn in the House-Senate conferences. As Rep. Traxler noted, the added money required for the next few years to continue the Space Station cannot be sustained without significant increases in taxes or severe cutting of other programs in this part of the federal budget. You might be interested in calling your congressperson and asked how he or she voted as it was recorded. Joseph Cain cain@geomag.gly.fsu.edu cain@fsu.bitnet scri::cain ------------------------------ Date: 7 Jun 91 02:20:43 GMT From: tm2b+@andrew.cmu.edu (Todd L. Masco) Subject: Re: RFD: talk.politics.space For my part, I'd like to see a different newsgroup for the political bickering. I'm biased, of course, but I would prefer not have to put work into dealing with such a large volume of pure opinion. I'd probably be unlikely to feed the new group into the SPACE Digest -- its volume is high enough already. If there's really a large outcry from subscribers, I'd be willing to throw together a SPACE Politics Digest -- but only if enough people already subscribing to the Digest want to get it. For my part, I'd be glad to never see the material again [except for the inevitable cross-posting, I s'pose]. [To stem off a flood of request for digest subscription requests from USENET readers, I remind y'all that the SPACE Digest is, by and large, a subset of sci.space mailed out mostly to people without USENET feeds.] -- Todd Masco | tm2b@andrew.cmu.edu | "Free speech is the right to shout CMU Physics | tm2b@andrew.BITNet | 'theatre' in a crowded fire." ------------------------------ Date: 7 Jun 91 04:56:20 GMT From: cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!utzoo!henry@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Henry Spencer) Subject: space news from April 15 AW&ST NASA formally approves extended mission for Magellan. The original basic-mission goal of mapping 70% of the surface was met on 2 April, and coverage at the end of the basic mission on 15 May is expected to be 84%. Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory gets NASA contract to do the ground science center for AXAF. NASP officials estimate $4-8G for construction and flight testing. This is the first public cost estimate from senior people. A more precise estimate will go to Congress next year. Astronaut Manley Carter killed in airline crash 5 April. No word yet on who will replace him on the International Microgravity Lab mission next Feb. Dept of Serious Unhappiness: Galileo attempts deployment of high-gain antenna but it doesn't. The spin rate *did* slow somewhat, but the antenna-deployed sensor did not report success. [In fact, it seems to have deployed partially.] NASA and DoD expected to present NSC a proposal to build a new heavylift booster resembling Energia, using a shuttle tank and SSME-derived engines plus ill-defined solid boosters. They are "reasonably comfortable" with predicting $500-1000/lb for this, and say that ALS's claim of $300/lb "never was realistic". DoD approves development of a new early-warning satellite to replace the current DSP series. Full-scale development to start circa 1994. Bureaucratic fun and games with the Topaz 2 space reactor that the Soviets loaned to the US for display. The NRC is blocking the return of the reactor to the USSR on the grounds that exporting a reactor to any nation which has not signed peaceful-nuclear-energy treaty (the USSR has not) is illegal. Various people, notably including SDIO (which is planning to buy a Topaz 2), are pushing for an exemption. Meanwhile, the Air&Space Museum is asking for Soviet permission to display the reactor until it is cleared for export! Atlantis, carrying the Gamma Ray Observatory, launched 5 April after a model countdown in which everything went right. This is the first flight for the new uprated shuttle computers. The only noteworthy aspect of the launch is that the forward skirt of the left SRB was found to have buckled around a fair bit of its circumference; this is thought to have happened at sea impact, rather than during ascent. First shuttle spacewalk in over five years, and an unplanned one at that, to free GRO's stuck antenna. The antenna failed to deploy despite power on the actuator and latch showing "open". Attempts to shake it loose were unsuccessful, so Jerry Ross and Jay Apt were sent out to do a manual deployment, a procedure practiced earlier underwater. Ross freed the antenna boom, removed a bolt to disengage the actuator, unlocked the boom linkage, moved the boom to deployed position manually, and locked the linkage again. Total elapsed time about 45 min. They took the opportunity to run some of the tests scheduled for their later spacewalk, and then waited in the airlock until GRO was ready and released. The cause of the antenna problem may never be known for sure, although the prime theory is that thermal insulation shifted during launch. ESA's ERS-1, carrying both optical sensors and radar on a Spot bus, readied for launch. There is some concern about whether ERS-2, whose construction start was delayed somewhat by funding holdups, will be ready in time for the end of ERS-1's lifetime; various aspects of ERS-1 are considered to be pushing the technologies and the expected lifetime is only 2-3 years, which will make things tight for ERS-2's scheduled launch in 1994. Story on Langley project to develop endothermic fuels to cool engine components in hypersonic aircraft. Such designs normally use cryogenic fuels for cooling, but the Navy does not want to handle cryogenics on aircraft carriers and is funding investigation of alternatives. The NASP materials-development consortium will shut down later this year, as it appears to have achieved its objectives of sorting out manufacturing processes and testing large components made with suitable materials. -- "We're thinking about upgrading from | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology SunOS 4.1.1 to SunOS 3.5." | henry@zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry ------------------------------ Date: 7 Jun 91 06:12:37 GMT From: cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!newstop!exodus!norge.Eng.Sun.COM!jmck@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (John McKernan) Subject: Re: Self-sustaining infrastructures fcrary@lightning.Berkeley.EDU (Frank Crary) writes: >Although I agree that the largest single market for satellite repairs would >be geostationary orbit, I do not think this is currectly feasable. I think the refueling of geostationary satellites is far and away the largest market. Because geostationary orbit space is limited, and high power high capacity satellites are desirable, there is a market for the largest possible satellites. There is good reason to want to refuel such satellites. This could be fully automated without much difficulty. All it requires is that the OMV automatically dock the satellite to the refueling station. Automated docking technology already exists. It is somewhat expensive to lift large amounts of bulk fuel all the way to geostationary orbit, but after all that is where the customers are. Lifting fuel to geostationary orbit might be a good reason to develope some sort of an electric upper stage. I don't think it is possible to repair most satellite malfunctions without human beings. Because of the abysmal state or our launch technology, making satellites redundant and fault tolerant is likely to be much cheaper than sending people up there to repair them for quite some time. John L. McKernan. jmck@sun.com Disclaimer: These are my opinions but, shockingly enough, not necessarily Sun's ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "It's kind of a macho thing, programmers are always trying to be weirder than their machines." ------------------------------ Date: 7 Jun 91 06:34:32 GMT From: cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!uwm.edu!rpi!usc!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!newstop!exodus!norge.Eng.Sun.COM!jmck@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (John McKernan) Subject: Re: orbiter production mcdonald@aries.scs.uiuc.edu (Doug McDonald) writes: >In article <1991Jun5.165136.2047@zoo.toronto.edu> henry@zoo.toronto.edu (Henry Spencer) writes: >>I don't think it is a particularly bright idea to let the orbiter line close >>when there is no replacement even in development, much less ready. > >I agree. The whole shuttle system is a botch but at the moment it is >the biggest we have, and the only manned one. It was stupid to make it >impossible to restart the Saturn. Let's don't do that again, evem for >as flawed system as the shuttle. I really don't think the shuttle provides enough unique capability to justify it's cost. The largest payload shroud on the Titan IV can launch payloads of almost the same weight and dimensions as the shuttle. We will lose the ability to launch people into orbit, but at $10000 per pound I really think manned space R&D funds would be much better spent developing cheaper launch technology, regenerative life support, advanced space propulsion, REAL (tm) space suits, etc. This would also allow other heavy payloads to be offered along with military heavy payloads in a guarenteed heavy lift launch market of 12 payloads a year or more. Offering this guarenteed market every two years or so to the lowest cost launch services provider would create private market compitition that could greatly reduce the cost of heavy lift launchers and lead to a greatly expanded space industry. John L. McKernan. jmck@sun.com Disclaimer: These are my opinions but, shockingly enough, not necessarily Sun's ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "It's kind of a macho thing, programmers are always trying to be weirder than their machines." ------------------------------ Date: 7 Jun 91 20:16:26 GMT From: carroll@a.cs.uiuc.edu (Alan M. Carroll) Subject: Re: space news from April 15 AW&ST In article <1991Jun7.045620.20705@zoo.toronto.edu>, henry@zoo.toronto.edu (Henry Spencer) writes: > Bureaucratic fun and games with the Topaz 2 space reactor that the Soviets > loaned to the US for display. The NRC is blocking the return of the reactor > to the USSR on the grounds that exporting a reactor to any nation which has > not signed peaceful-nuclear-energy treaty (the USSR has not) is illegal. > Various people, notably including SDIO (which is planning to buy a Topaz 2), > are pushing for an exemption. Meanwhile, the Air&Space Museum is asking for > Soviet permission to display the reactor until it is cleared for export! I _must_ be missing something here. The NRC is attempting to prevent the USSR from retrieving a reactor _owned by the USSR_ because US laws prohibit sending them one? Will this be the source of another round of "Ugly American" jokes in Moscow? Also, hasn't some US agency already bought a Topaz 2? -- Alan M. Carroll <-- Another casualty of applied metaphysics Epoch Development Team Urbana Il. "I hate shopping with the reality-impaired" - Susan ------------------------------ Date: 8 Jun 91 00:57:23 GMT From: udecc.engr.udayton.edu!blackbird.afit.af.mil!tkelso@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (TS Kelso) Subject: NASA Prediction Bulletins, Part 1 The most current orbital elements from the NASA Prediction Bulletins are carried on the Celestial BBS, (513) 427-0674, and are updated several times weekly. Documentation and tracking software are also available on this system. As a service to the satellite user community, the most current of these elements are uploaded weekly to sci.space. This week's elements are provided below. The Celestial BBS may be accessed 24 hours/day at 300, 1200, or 2400 baud using 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no parity. - Current NASA Prediction Bulletins #853a - Alouette 1 1 00424U 62B-A 1 91156.37619448 .00000199 00000-0 22777-3 0 4288 2 00424 80.4640 297.8292 0024133 84.6048 275.7849 13.67535459430968 ATS 3 1 03029U 67111 A 91139.68522137 -.00000076 00000-0 99999-4 0 5806 2 03029 13.6124 18.3200 0015622 224.3095 135.5162 1.00272858 86165 Cosmos 398 1 04966U 71 16 A 91157.04938462 .00089522 19834-4 41718-3 0 6524 2 04966 51.4914 29.9077 2012674 125.4872 255.0889 11.62769426631715 Starlette 1 07646U 75010 A 91155.47744118 .00000019 00000-0 62244-4 0 2763 2 07646 49.8266 208.4021 0205817 274.4894 83.2511 13.82158783824503 LAGEOS 1 08820U 76039 A 91153.40353478 .00000004 00000-0 99999-4 0 2824 2 08820 109.8296 115.1017 0044241 164.0015 196.1732 6.38664237 96305 GOES 2 1 10061U 77048 A 91137.20844907 -.00000260 00000-0 99999-4 0 6253 2 10061 8.8598 59.6155 0001980 3.2944 187.4358 1.00271114 52368 IUE 1 10637U 78012 A 91156.74256864 -.00000179 00000-0 79862-4 0 2840 2 10637 32.8579 113.1903 1398321 2.9182 357.6647 1.00270881 10017 GPS-0001 1 10684U 78020 A 91155.95638318 .00000003 00000-0 99999-4 0 6821 2 10684 63.8998 78.6494 0125951 198.5722 160.9751 2.00553249 82929 GPS-0002 1 10893U 78 47 A 91155.96352691 -.00000021 00000-0 99999-4 0 3996 2 10893 64.2124 319.4831 0173420 24.0371 336.7492 2.00535410 95744 GOES 3 1 10953U 78062 A 91150.96342203 .00000107 00000-0 99999-4 0 1333 2 10953 7.7517 62.1347 0004697 55.0449 303.6274 1.00253252 569 SeaSat 1 1 10967U 78064 A 91155.08894195 .00001010 00000-0 38523-3 0 5524 2 10967 108.0228 326.9370 0002489 240.4816 119.6111 14.36659659676973 GPS-0003 1 11054U 78093 A 91155.69519090 -.00000020 00000-0 99999-4 0 4423 2 11054 63.5623 315.5601 0067093 119.1884 241.4847 2.00572408 92757 Nimbus 7 1 11080U 78098 A 91154.20857708 .00000100 00000-0 11930-3 0 7805 2 11080 99.1735 55.7563 0008279 225.2221 134.8258 13.83556677636578 GPS-0004 1 11141U 78112 A 91154.83205162 .00000003 00000-0 99999-4 0 1910 2 11141 63.8978 78.5544 0061754 310.9618 48.5148 2.00543846 91434 GPS-0005 1 11690U 80 11 A 91153.97018418 .00000004 00000-0 99999-4 0 1865 2 11690 64.3748 80.8809 0125230 203.3048 156.1289 2.00551763 97273 GPS-0006 1 11783U 80 32 A 91155.16218978 -.00000020 00000-0 99999-4 0 4858 2 11783 63.3251 315.1702 0190812 28.2869 332.6961 2.03456271 81398 GOES 5 1 12472U 81049 A 91154.89181078 .00000138 00000-0 99999-4 0 1386 2 12472 4.3401 71.3647 0003550 351.8390 7.9111 1.00276180 35754 Cosmos 1383 1 13301U 82 66 A 91156.18533559 .00000119 00000-0 12824-3 0 7338 2 13301 82.9311 42.0598 0026227 271.0452 88.7697 13.67923326445934 LandSat 4 1 13367U 82 72 A 91156.70038267 .00001105 00000-0 25451-3 0 8215 2 13367 98.1164 216.2847 0004385 97.4082 262.7615 14.57171160472781 IRAS 1 13777U 83 4 A 91155.54369473 .00000111 00000-0 10063-3 0 9853 2 13777 99.0134 351.6320 0012974 131.5010 228.7306 13.98951351 96207 Cosmos 1447 1 13916U 83 21 A 91156.35524288 .00000097 00000-0 96729-4 0 8300 2 13916 82.9455 110.9761 0036140 236.3084 123.4628 13.74148606411170 TDRS 1 1 13969U 83 26 B 91154.94766816 .00000128 00000-0 99999-4 0 3998 2 13969 5.3209 62.6467 0003360 15.2745 344.5366 1.00279807 2878 GOES 6 1 14050U 83 41 A 91155.88002832 .00000119 00000-0 99999-4 0 4870 2 14050 3.1061 73.9535 0002794 306.4369 53.2158 1.00264119 1670 OSCAR 10 1 14129U 83 58 B 91155.10319021 -.00000038 00000-0 99998-4 0 6750 2 14129 25.7988 142.3386 6028543 247.4620 40.3214 2.05883770 31972 GPS-0008 1 14189U 83 72 A 91144.22025768 .00000002 00000-0 99999-4 0 9771 2 14189 63.5426 77.1744 0142615 225.7685 133.0315 2.00567950 57603 LandSat 5 1 14780U 84 21 A 91156.66897584 .00000428 00000-0 99999-4 0 6765 2 14780 98.2439 217.3095 0002611 39.3795 320.7571 14.57100189386198 UoSat 2 1 14781U 84 21 B 91153.62870239 .00001661 00000-0 30478-3 0 239 2 14781 97.8997 198.9997 0011569 210.8915 149.1608 14.66956493387316 GPS-0009 1 15039U 84 59 A 91155.86184507 .00000001 00000-0 99999-4 0 2403 2 15039 63.2995 75.9084 0029296 226.2888 133.4795 2.00564613 51118 Cosmos 1574 1 15055U 84 62 A 91156.46944373 .00000117 00000-0 11448-3 0 887 2 15055 82.9592 161.8729 0029349 60.2567 300.1506 13.73459218348564 GPS-0010 1 15271U 84 97 A 91153.81263023 -.00000020 00000-0 99999-4 0 823 2 15271 63.0303 314.5075 0113031 333.2677 26.1477 2.00565654 48189 Cosmos 1602 1 15331U 84105 A 91154.71504064 .00002795 00000-0 35994-3 0 6058 2 15331 82.5385 34.6045 0020116 263.8163 96.0760 14.80649990360059 NOAA 9 1 15427U 84123 A 91153.55087734 .00000426 00000-0 24931-3 0 7841 2 15427 99.1690 166.7161 0016227 104.7737 255.5233 14.13014961333453 GPS-0011 1 16129U 85 93 A 91156.02477091 .00000003 00000-0 99999-4 0 7839 2 16129 64.0689 77.1775 0123875 146.8801 213.9076 2.00564988 41434 Mir 1 16609U 86 17 A 91156.59813074 .00051363 00000-0 46168-3 0 5085 2 16609 51.6059 345.8049 0005685 273.9404 86.1098 15.67702376303356 SPOT 1 1 16613U 86 19 A 91156.71489098 .00000521 00000-0 26236-3 0 3533 2 16613 98.6962 230.8594 0000288 157.5400 202.5784 14.20039966114105 Cosmos 1766 1 16881U 86 55 A 91155.85596152 .00002818 00000-0 36943-3 0 4497 2 16881 82.5195 92.2015 0019059 279.6922 80.2148 14.79907955261262 EGP 1 16908U 86 61 A 91154.21713719 -.00000038 00000-0 66109-5 0 3742 2 16908 50.0156 256.8390 0011272 8.9594 351.1440 12.44395285218567 NOAA 10 1 16969U 86 73 A 91152.38802805 .00000581 00000-0 26858-3 0 6349 2 16969 98.5670 176.9946 0013326 339.5424 20.5220 14.24143563244302 MOS-1 1 17527U 87 18 A 91156.69916079 .00000293 00000-0 24277-3 0 8601 2 17527 99.0691 228.9948 0000591 92.6966 267.4247 13.94903424218544 GOES 7 1 17561U 87 22 A 91155.58667837 -.00000078 00000-0 99999-4 0 8444 2 17561 0.0836 62.8969 0005354 330.3957 326.7802 1.00300505 402 Kvant-1 1 17845U 87 30 A 91156.78936114 .00058947 00000-0 52788-3 0 6166 2 17845 51.6048 344.8323 0005809 272.4632 87.5950 15.67735498238110 DMSP B5D2-3 1 18123U 87 53 A 91156.93002591 .00000615 00000-0 33865-3 0 114 2 18123 98.8106 347.8109 0015583 95.8838 264.4130 14.14607092204408 RS-10/11 1 18129U 87 54 A 91156.82989005 .00000253 00000-0 26671-3 0 6686 2 18129 82.9259 67.2510 0010706 212.5263 147.5238 13.72190978198032 Meteor 2-16 1 18312U 87 68 A 91156.63378723 .00000199 00000-0 16963-3 0 6911 2 18312 82.5561 10.1424 0012728 348.8307 11.2564 13.83800059191860 Meteor 2-17 1 18820U 88 5 A 91156.75995745 .00000267 00000-0 22858-3 0 5374 2 18820 82.5430 69.3768 0018354 52.8892 307.3945 13.84491546169100 DMSP B5D2-4 1 18822U 88 6 A 91156.99352085 .00000536 00000-0 25949-3 0 9105 2 18822 98.5971 32.8600 0006580 338.0932 21.9970 14.22036907173090 Glonass 34 1 19163U 88 43 A 91156.02905718 .00000020 00000-0 99999-4 0 3284 2 19163 64.9178 147.3933 0007176 204.1553 155.8146 2.13102679 23666 Glonass 36 1 19165U 88 43 C 91156.08583930 .00000020 00000-0 99999-4 0 3279 2 19165 64.8998 147.3855 0005304 317.0477 42.9154 2.13102721 23663 AO-13 1 19216U 88 51 B 91142.28184158 -.00000009 00000-0 86587-3 0 2737 2 19216 56.7554 93.3586 7180206 254.9958 21.7456 2.09701594 22515 OKEAN 1 1 19274U 88 56 A 91156.56007713 .00002052 00000-0 27352-3 0 1556 2 19274 82.5246 190.3360 0023301 50.8602 309.4706 14.79060193157118 Meteor 3-2 1 19336U 88 64 A 91156.70441986 .00000025 00000-0 50917-4 0 7899 2 19336 82.5438 27.3193 0017605 145.4849 214.7420 13.16924644137486 Glonass 39 1 19503U 88 85 C 91156.10589178 -.00000018 00000-0 99999-4 0 2282 2 19503 65.4821 26.6813 0004372 181.5153 178.5457 2.13103757 21157 NOAA 11 1 19531U 88 89 A 91156.23339540 .00000475 00000-0 27951-3 0 5385 2 19531 99.0297 110.9257 0012475 14.9344 345.2206 14.12161954138789 TDRS 2 1 19548U 88 91 B 91145.80898201 .00000112 00000-0 99999-4 0 2748 2 19548 0.9671 79.8503 0002258 351.2725 288.5285 1.00270195 8355 Glonass 40 1 19749U 89 1 A 91156.14728291 .00000019 00000-0 99999-4 0 286 2 19749 64.8630 147.0441 0007814 275.4961 84.4167 2.13101755 18682 Glonass 41 1 19750U 89 1 B 91156.20525394 .00000020 00000-0 99999-4 0 512 2 19750 64.8839 147.0681 0007928 259.2351 100.6785 2.13102256 18684 GPS BII-01 1 19802U 89 13 A 91154.90019117 .00000017 00000-0 99999-4 0 2719 2 19802 55.0346 183.5433 0048330 167.9358 192.2382 2.00566052 16807 Akebono 1 19822U 89 16 A 91156.71344237 .00043189 00000-0 24507-2 0 445 2 19822 75.1231 62.6974 4074745 352.3030 3.0231 7.30982130 25272 Meteor 2-18 1 19851U 89 18 A 91156.89627143 .00000134 00000-0 11111-3 0 4892 2 19851 82.5190 306.6154 0015672 90.3970 269.8986 13.84137164114490 MOP-1 1 19876U 89 20 B 91 83.49540771 .00000025 00000-0 99999-4 0 1840 2 19876 0.2910 50.4188 0001552 314.1531 355.4087 1.00273956 3471 TDRS 3 1 19883U 89 21 B 91153.63644023 -.00000237 00000-0 99999-4 0 2777 2 19883 1.0150 78.4268 0002075 2.0873 358.3341 1.00265559 78406 GPS BII-02 1 20061U 89 44 A 91103.87321174 -.00000034 00000-0 99999-4 0 2711 2 20061 54.8877 3.6255 0090918 184.4845 175.4971 2.00566450 13525 Nadezhda 1 1 20103U 89 50 A 91156.66722075 .00000120 00000-0 11628-3 0 3870 2 20103 82.9615 24.4328 0038265 132.0736 228.3683 13.73693073 96243 GPS BII-03 1 20185U 89064 A 91104.71060838 -.00000123 00000-0 00000 0 0 01797 2 20185 054.9166 186.3301 0020176 172.0341 188.0316 02.00562496012111 GPS BII-04 1 20302U 89085 A 91106.73331065 -.00000084 00000-0 00000 0 0 01794 2 20302 054.3986 304.6789 0029381 333.0204 026.8604 02.00556152010956 Meteor 3-3 1 20305U 89 86 A 91156.54631401 .00000043 00000-0 99999-4 0 3863 2 20305 82.5530 328.7687 0016046 164.2082 195.9542 13.15954469 77428 -- Dr TS Kelso Assistant Professor of Space Operations tkelso@blackbird.afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology ------------------------------ End of SPACE Digest V13 #709 *******************