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bkm2304
01-03-2016, 10:01 PM
Hi All,

Last night I was outside with my camera hoping to catch some pictures of meteors. After a sequence of 134 pictures I went inside and was puzzled by what my camera had caught.


The object has 3 parts: a central core, a small halo and then a larger halo that measures about 1.5 degrees - 3 moon diameters.

I think it may be a venting rocket or similar. It "turns" as it crosses the sky in a way similar to watching the ISS as it approaches and recedes.

Any suggestions would be welcome.

Details

Pic 1-5 taken at 9:15, 9:17, 9:32, 9:51 and 9:56PM AEST respectively.

The images are crops of a larger field. The bright star top right is Canopus.

First Pic; RA = 6:00, DEC = -62.5
Last Pic; RA = 7:45, DEC = -62.8

Velocity = Approx 18 Deg/Hour, bearing 100 deg E by SSE

Camera: Nikon D7000 with Nikkor 35mm F1.8. 20 Secs @ 8,000 ISO.

Pics are here (http://www.theamateurastronomer.com/blog).

h0ughy
01-03-2016, 10:54 PM
COOL CAPTURE

trying to work through the images its probably a satellite venting gas/fuel......buuuuttttt i cant find a satellite moving in that area

h0ughy
01-03-2016, 11:12 PM
looked at your first image and processed that through astrometry.net


might help looking into it a bit?

bkm2304
01-03-2016, 11:12 PM
Yes Dave, it certainly looks like venting or similar. It's speed suggests also that it was a long way up, orbiting about once every 20 hours. Perhaps someone smarter than me can calculate its height and it may help to figure out what it is?

Richard.

h0ughy
01-03-2016, 11:26 PM
this is the sky i have for that time. now there is a comet that is close but it must have brightened somewhat and travelled a different path:P

deanm
02-03-2016, 10:06 AM
I'll agree with the spacecraft venting suggestion: back in 2011, I saw shuttle Atlantis on it's last-ever orbit pass over Adelaide, chasing the ISS from which it had just undocked and completed a mutual-inspection 'fly-around'.

Exhaust from the shuttle's RCS maneuvering jets surrounded the ISS (you can see this is they pass behind a convenient 'sucker hole').

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qeb2ix6HdpA

30 minutes later, the shuttle had de-orbited and landed in the US for the last time.

Gob-smacked would put it mildly!

Dean

doppler
02-03-2016, 10:35 AM
Great captures Richard and Dean,

I saw 2 bright satellites travelling in formation back in 2001, looked really cool. Turned out that it was the Mir spacestation and the progress rocket sent up to deorbit the space station.

GrahamDuncan
05-03-2016, 08:12 PM
I don't believe it's venting,they would only do that for a de-orbit if their is any fuel left,fuel is way to precious, it's the holy grail of spaceflight,and we would know of a bird coming down.