It's been fun watching it with gpredict for the last 10 days or so (you need to update the keplers every day). For a long time it trailed behind the ISS, slightly lower and slightly faster, catching up with ISS a little bit each day. A few days ago it zoomed ahead of ISS. I thought this was an error in my keplers, but is evidently part of the exercise with the first ATV to do a simulated collision avoidance maneuver.
I wonder what the visual range to the Jules Verne is from the ISS, it's so large that you must be able to spot it from quite a distance onboard the ISS.
It's definitely worth loading into your favorite satellite tracking program.
jeff
Udo Schneider wrote:
Have a look at http://www.esa.int/esaCP/index.html
Udo, DL7OL
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