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The classified US Space Force X-37B spaceplane OTV 7 (2023-210A) was launched on 29 December 2023, in an unusual Highly Elliptical Orbit. Five weeks after launch, in the first week of February 2024, it was found on-orbit by Tomi Simola from Finland in a 38600 x 300 km, 59.15 degree inclined orbit (see this earlier blogpost). We followed it for a month and then lost it: the last observation was on March 15.
But now it has been recovered! On the night of July 30-31, I was imaging geosynchronous objects when I noted a short trail made by an unidentified interlooper. Mike McCants identified the UNID as OTV 7.
The image in top of this post (one out of four images spanning half an hour) shows the short faint trail created by OTV 7. The ~9 by 4.5 meters large X-37B spaceplane was near apogee of its orbit at that time, at about 35535 km altitude (and a range of some 38775 km to my observing location). The image is a 10-second exposure with a ZWO ASI 6200 MM PRO and Samyang 1.2/85 mm lens, and shows only a small part of the original image. It was taken from Leiden, the Netherlands.
Weather next initially conspired against me, but last night, August 3-4, I again observed it, some 25 minutes late on the initial elset estimate. This is a small part of one of the images, shsowing the faint trail created by OTV 7:
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The observing conditions were very dynamic this time: after rainshowers, small but bright, stamp-sized clearings were sometimes present in the clpud cover. I managed to image the object through such gaps in the cloud cover a few times over an half-an-hour-period, 25 minutes late on the preliminary orbit.
Below is an example of what I am talking about when I say "stamp-sized clearings": this is the last image (reduced in size as the true image is 9576 x 6388 pixels) on which I could find it. All the white is clouds....:
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The new observations constrain the orbit a little bit better: 314 x 35552 km, 59.15 degree inclined. A provisional elset:
OTV 7
1 58666U 23210A 24216.90625742 0.00000000 00000-0 00000+0 0 01
2 58666 59.1511 329.1636 7247171 178.5736 186.3429 2.29027449 03
rms 0.004 deg from 9 obs, arc July 30.96 - Aug 3.96 UTC
Below is a comparison between the (forward propagated) orbit from March (red), and the current orbit (white). Apogee is some 2300 km lower than it was in March (and this is not due to natural orbital decay, but due to manoeuvering). The orbital plane itself is still similar.
click image to enlarge |
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