John Vasquez of the Naval Research
Laboratory prepares Starshine 1 for
vibration test. Photo by Michael A. Savell. |
Starshine 3 Re-entry Bulletin - January 2, 2003Starshine 3 will burn up like a meteor in the earth's upper atmosphere in mid to late January 2003. We will publish up-to-date predictions right here on this web site of approximately when and where that event should occur. We invite all of you who have polished mirrors for any of our satellites to be watching for Starshine 3's flaming fireball moving across the sky. We also encourage you to attempt to photograph or videotape this visually spectacular event. Click here for the latest official predictions of when and where Starshine 3 will flame out. These predictions will change, as a result of last-minute solar activity, so you'll need to check this site frequently, especially during the final days of the satellite's life. If you are successful in witnessing Starshine 3's fireball, please send an email message to Gil Moore, Starshine project director, at gilmoore12@aol.com, listing the time that you saw it and where you were standing when it happened. Please also describe what it looked like and where it was in the sky. Click here for Official U.S. Time so you can synchronize your wristwatch or stop watch before you go out to attempt to record the event. Be sure to click on your own time zone on that web site, if you live on the North American continent, or make the appropriate correction to your own time zone, if you live on another continent. If you also succeed in taking a film photograph or digital image or videotape of the fireball, please send an email message to gilmoore12@aol.com, stating that you have such an image. Please list your location when you took the image, the direction your camera was pointed and the precise time that re-entry took place. Don't forget to include your email and shipping addresses, as well as your telephone or Fax number. We will contact you with specific instructions about where to ship your film or digital image or videotape. A panel of expert astrophotographers will authenticate all received images and select the best one of them. The Starshine project will then ship a beautiful prize, consisting of an International Space Station model assembly kit, to the winner. And now for the fine print. We need to warn you that the mathematical odds of the Starshine 3 fireball being observed and/or photographed by anyone are very small, since 4/5ths of the earth's surface is covered by water, a substantial portion of the rest of it is frequently covered by clouds, and much of the rest of it is unpopulated. However, in spite of those odds, we will appreciate your making an attempt to help us determine precisely where Starshine 3 ends its orbital life. |
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Last Updated: January 5, 2003