Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Live Space Station Tracking Map. The tracker shows where the Space Station is right now and its path 90 minutes ago (-1.5 hr) and 90 minutes ahead (+1.5 hr). The dark overlay indicates where it is nighttime in the world.
- Sighting Opportunities
Use the Spot The Station website, which calculates sightings...
- Sign Up
*A note about mobile text alerts: The Spot The Station app...
- FAQ
The space station is Earth's only microgravity laboratory....
- International Space Station
Backdropped by a cloud-covered part of Earth, the...
- Crews and Expeditions
The first long-term space station mission was Expedition 1...
- Contact
Watch the International Space Station pass overhead! It is...
- Sighting Opportunities
Watch the International Space Station pass overhead! It is the third brightest object in the sky and easy to spot if you know when to look up. NASA’s Spot the Station mobile application and website make knowing when to see it easy.
Track the position of the International Space Station and other satellites live! The service uses data provided by space agencies (TLE), allowing users around the world to monitor the current position of satellites and the projected route of their flights over specific locations on Earth.
This map shows the ground track of the International Space Station's next orbit. The crosshair marks its current position. The blue sections of the ISS' track indicate when the space station is in the earth's shadow. The red sections mark when the ISS is sunlit.
Use the Spot The Station website, which calculates sightings for over 6,700 locations worldwide using data from Mission Control at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, TX. Enter your location and find out when the ISS will be passing over you next.
3 Σεπ 2024 · Live views from the International Space Station are streaming from an external camera mounted on the station's Harmony module.
This 3D space shuttle tracker shows the real-time (updated every 2 seconds) position of Endeavour - STS-134, from take-off through to landing. The location is based on real-time data from NASA mission control.