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-
- Obtaining New Elements
- ======================
-
- Most satellites being actively operated are occasionally required to perform
- orbit correcting manoeuvres. This is particularly true of the sun-synchronous
- satellites. Also, the orbit perturbations included in these (or any) orbit
- models are approximations only, and so eventually predictions from these
- elements will not be very accurate. This means that although I have included a
- recent large set of elements with this distribution, you will eventually need
- to update them. Generally speaking, elements that are less than a week old will
- give you a prediction error of up to a few seconds, which is adequate for most
- people.
-
- There are several places where you can get hold of regular elements updates,
- and the sources I am currently aware of are listed below. If you hear of any
- other sources of elements, please let me know as I would like to keep this list
- as complete as possible as an aid to users of !Spotter.
-
- Anonymous FTP
- -------------
-
- This is available to anyone on the Internet, or to anyone who can access
- any of the numerous FTP Email servers. FTP to archive.afit.af.mil
- (129.92.1.66), and change to directory pub/space. An update of the list
- provided in this distribution is held in file 'tle.new', but several subsets
- of this file exist, and some of these are:
-
- tle.vis - Visible satellites only
- tle.gps - GPS satellites
- tle.sts - Most recent shuttle elements only (only updated when
- a shuttle mission is in progress)
- tle.met - Meteorological satellites
-
- These files are updated weekly.
-
- NETNEWS
- -------
-
- The file tle.vis is posted weekly to NETNEWS groups sci.space.news and
- rec.radio.amateur.misc, usually on a Friday afternoon. Shuttle elements,
- are usually posted seperately prior to and during a shuttle mission.
-
- BBS
- ---
-
- The most recent NORAD two line elements are updated several times weekly
- on the Celestial BBS, and so this is the place to go if you really need the
- latest data. The number is +1 513 427-0674, and may be accessed 24 hours/day
- at 300, 1200, 2400, 4800, or 9600 bps using 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no
- parity. This is in the US, and so can work out expensive for regular updates.
-
-
- Stuart Martin, 3rd April 1993.
-