I stepped outside this morning to look at the sky, and noticed a pair of satellites in formation. They were identical in brightness, about 4th magnitude, traveling northwest to southeast and passing high overhead. I followed them from Ursa Major through the tail of Leo, the rearmost passing just a few arc-minutes from Denebola. They were a couple of degrees apart (crude estimation, I'm at work and away from my atlases) and stayed in formation rigidly. Without going to a lot of trouble, can someone who follows such things ID this pair, or at least classify them? This is the first formation I've seen from light-polluted SL valley location. TIA. BTW, I'm wearing my new glasses, and this time I sprang for the anti-reflection coating. NOTICEABLE difference, I'm sure I can see dimmer stars (maybe up to 1/2 mag.) than with my old glasses, contrast is much improved, no glare, ghosts, etc. This is also my first foray into bifocals, I no longer have to constantly remove my glasses as I alternately focus on distant and nearby objects. These are the "progressive" lenses (lineless) and I find them quite good for astronomy, so-far. Also driving (can see the dashboard clearly) as well as eating (my food is no longer a blur with glasses on). __________________________________________ Yahoo! DSL Â Something to write home about. Just $16.99/mo. or less. dsl.yahoo.com