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Originally Posted by Ryderscope
New discovery maybe
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I don't think so. A near Earth asteroid this bright would have sounded alarm bells on astro news sites.
I did a maximum stack of all the subs in DSS and now I'm inclined to think that it was not an asteroid as I found a second, much fainter, object that took about 12 minutes to cross the field.
It is still a mystery though. Geosynchronous satellites move at 15 degrees per hour against the starry background and the Moon at about 0.5 degrees per hour.
So for any space junk to move at about 3 degrees per hour, it would have to orbit the earth well beyond the geostationary distance. And that begs the question of what can look so bright from such a distance. I suppose the second, fainter, object could be a discarded piece of space junk moving somewhat beyond geosynchronous orbit.