The International Space Station Can Be Seen Sunday Evening from the East Coast
If You Can't See the ISS in Person, Watch a Close-up Video
The ISS will appear first in the Southwest part of the sky and traverse toward the north east. It will not quite get directly overhead before it is blocked form the sun's rays by the bulk of the Earth. The International Space Station will appear as a very bright star that moves rapidly across the sky. It is only reflected sunlight that is visible, not lights on the ISS itself, so if you see blinking lights or red or blue colored lights then you are most likely looking at a terrestrial aircraft and not the International Space Station passing overhead.
The video to the left of this page offers a closer look at the International Space Station. The video was taken from aboard one of the NASA space shuttles after it undocked with the ISS and circled it. The large solar panels that provide power for the International Space Station can be clearly seen arrayed around either end of the ISS. The photovoltaic solar panels convert sunlight directly to electricity and are oriented to face the sun at all times when the Earth is not between the ISS and the sun.
At the present time, NASA reports the International Space Station is manned by the crew of Expedition 21: European Space Agency astronaut Frank De Winne (the Expedition 21 commander), NASA astronaut Nicole Stott, Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko, Russian cosmonaut Maxim Suraev, NASA astronaut Jeffrey Williams and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Robert Thirsk. On November 12th, the space shuttle Atlantis will launch on its final mission, docking with the ISS on November 14th and departing on the 21st.
Sources:
http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/390094main_Expedition_21_22.pdf
weblogs.marylandweather.com/2009/11/heads_up_space_station_flyby_s.html
www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html
Published by Brad Sylvester
Professional writer specializing in space news and all topics related to outer space. View profile
- Name the New Space Station ModuleYou have a chance to select the name for the Node 3 module being sent to the International Space Station (ISS) with an attached observation deck.
Special Updates Leading to the Undocking of Atlantis from ISSThe Atlantis mission is successful. The new solar arrays are functioning. Clay Anderson is on ISS. Suni Williams says farewell. And Atlantis performs final tasks.
Endeavor Leaving International Space StationAFP reports that the space shuttle Endeavor has successfully cleared the International Space Station and is on its way home.- NASA Announces Engine Upgrade for Space Shuttle AtlantisNASA announced tuesday that a major upgrade will be ready for the Space Shuttle Atlantis' June 8th launch.
Space Shuttle Atlantis Takes Off on 11-Day MissionAtlantis, designated STS-122 by NASA, plans to dock with the International Space Station on Saturday, February 9.
- Space Shuttle Endeavour Launches
- Space Shuttle Set to Undock from Space Station
- Atlantis Crew Makes Preparations for Arrival at International Space Station
- How to View the International Space Station
- Damaged Space Shuttle Atlantis in Need of Repair Mission Extended by Two Days
- NASA Mission, International Space Station Troubled with Space Debris
- Italian Students to Talk to Woman-Commanded International Space Station by Amateur...
- The ISS will be visible in Sunday's evening sky from the east coast of the US.
- The ISS will disppear before it gets directly overhead as it falls into the Earth's shadow.
- The ISS is currently housing six astronauts.





1 Comments
Post a CommentThat is incredibly cool! I'd want to see it for sure!