Hi Rod,
I also get these Launch Alerts from Brian Webb. I have been for many many years ! I will usually look for the contrails if I am at all able too. I have been able to see quite a few of them from all the way out here in Rancho Cucamonga or my work location in Brea. I did also see this last one on Thursday from my back yard here in Rancho. Did you get it on video? It was a rather short contrail from my QTH. Curious as to what it looked like in Santa Barbara.
73's
Tom - WB6HYH
On 1/20/2011 8:22 AM, rod@sbatv.org wrote:
I hope you all can enjoy this huge rocket launch, scheduled today for 1:08pm. I hope to capture some video from the ground in Santa Barbara. If I do, I'll probably put it on ATV next Tuesday night at 8:30pm, streamed at www.batc.tv, ATV Repeaters, WB9KMO-ATN. - Rod, WB9KMO
-----Original Message----- From: Launch Alert [mailto:launch-alert@mailman.qth.net] Sent: Thursday, January 20, 2011 5:05 AM To: Launch Alert Subject: [Launch Alert] Launch on Schedule
LAUNCH ALERT Brian Webb Ventura County, California launch-alert-editor@earthlink.net www.spacearchive.info
2011 January 20 (Thursday) 05:01 PST
LAUNCH ON SCHEDULE
Today's first-ever launch of a Delta IV Heavy booster from Vandenberg Air Force Base appears to be on schedule. The Delta is slated to lift-off from Space Launch Complex 6 (SLC-6) at south Vandenberg at 1:08 p.m.
Following liftoff, the rocket will rise vertically for several seconds. It will then slowly pitch over and probably head southward over the ocean.
Plans call for the rocket to deliver a classified payload into orbit for the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office.
Late yesterday afternoon the United Launch Alliance, the launch services provider, issued the following launch update:
" ... it was a quiet day of launch processing at SLC-6 today so we are a "GO" for tomorrow. The weather forecast is still 90 percent acceptable for launch.
... High pressure dominates California bringing fair weather and warmer temperatures. Winds for MST roll will be out of the east 12-18 gusting to 25 kts. Winds at SLC-6 at T-0 will be out of the northwest at 10-15 kts. Upper-level winds will max out at 60 kts at 40,000 ft from the north. There are no predicted space weather events for T-0."
RESOURCES
For additional information related to today's Delta IV Heavy launch, go to the following locations:
Delta IV Heavy www.boeing.com/defense-space/space/delta/delta4/delta4.htm www.youtube.com/watch?v=XB5_j1RYMYg Payload The payload is classified, but here's a link to the government agency responsible for the payload: www.nro.mil Launch Pad www.spaceflightnow.com/delta/d352/history/ Launch Viewing www.spacearchive.info/vafbview.htm Photographing Launches www.spacearchive.info/vafbphoto.htm
LAUNCH ALERT WEB PAGE
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