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Credit & Copyright: Robert Arn    
   
Explanation:
Have you ever seen a "star" drifting slowly overhead, but not known what it was?   
   
Sometimes even pointing it out to friends or family will only lead to a shrug.   
   
What you are seeing, most likely, is a spacecraft in    
low Earth orbit    
reflecting back sunlight as it circles the Earth once every 90 minutes or so.   
   
Two of the brighter spacecraft in the present day sky   
are the International Space Station (ISS), and, when it is up, a NASA space shuttle.   
   
As relative orientations change, the brightness of reflections may also change, sometimes   
suddenly.    
   
Another source of    
bright drifting objects,    
Iridium communication satellites, may even appear to    
flare up to become brighter than any other sky object   
for a few seconds.   
   
Pictured above, two bright points of light separated by only a few degrees drifted   
together across the sky above    
Lory State Park,    
Colorado,    
USA last week, just after   
sunset.   
   
These lights were were the    
ISS and the space shuttle Discovery,    
which had undocked from the    
ISS a few hours earlier.   
   
Given a digital fusion of many separate camera exposures and a wide angle perspective,   
the pair appears above as steaks in front of point-like stars.   
   
Web sites now exist that can help you   
identify    
unknown "drifters" and even predict the time of the next   
pass of the ISS visible from your location.   
   
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NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and Disclaimers
NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: international space station - ISS - space shuttle Discovery
Publications with words: international space station - ISS - space shuttle Discovery
See also:
