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See The International Space Station Mon Night

The orbiting research platform will be visible for about six minutes on Monday evening.

 
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An amateur video of the International Space Station passing over southern France, as seen from England. The station will be visible from the Philadelphia region on Monday evening.
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An amateur video of the International Space Station passing over southern France, as seen from England. The station will be visible from the Philadelphia region on Monday evening.

It's a bird ... it's a plane ... it's the International Space Station!

Orbiting about 250 miles above the Earth's surface, the International Space Station will be visible from the western Philadelphia suburbs for about six minutes on Monday, starting at 6:19 p.m., according to NASA.

The station will actually be passing over upstate New York and Massachusetts. Because of its height, we can still see it from our area. It will then pass out over the Atlantic near Cape Cod as it fades from our view.

Look for the station to pass from northwest to east-southeast, about halfway between the horizon and the zenith (which is directly overhead).

The station's brightness will wax and wane as it passes by; this is a function of changing amounts of the sun's light being reflected from the station's surface to our vantage point.

At its most brilliant, the station will look like an extremely bright, fast moving plane. Just don't expect to hear any jet engine noise!

The current crew of six astronauts includes two Americans, three Russians, and Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield, who frequently posts photographs and other live updates from the space station to his Twitter account.

Related Topics: International Space Station

Ted Merriman

9:06 pm on Monday, February 25, 2013

In case you missed it, you can see it again Tuesday at 7:07 PM and Wednesday at 6:16 PM

http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/sightings/index.html

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Larry

6:30 am on Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Did anyone get a chance to see it in the Malvern area? Seemed to cloudy.

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Matthew Crawley

4:02 pm on Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Mary and I went outside and were able to see it for a few minutes before it disappeared into clouds.

Geoeray

8:01 am on Tuesday, February 26, 2013

It can be tracked with a phone app ISS Detector. The app sends a message to your phone when it is approching. It works great. On another night it crossed from NW to SE quickly. Then an hour later went by to the west.

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