Latitude: ° | Longitude: ° Speed = 17310 mph | Orbital Period = 1½ hours +− Leaflet | © OpenStreetMap contributors //url for live data const url="https://api.wheretheiss.at/v1/satellites/25544"; // ISS image as an icon var issIcon = L.icon({ iconUrl: 'images/ISS.png...
The ISS zips around Earth at an average speed of 17,500 mph ( 28,000 km/h), completing 16 orbits per day. As the ISS orbits with an inclination of 51.6 degrees, if you live beyond 51.6 degrees north or south of the equator the ISS will never appear directly overhead. The ISS is...
While the spacecraft will appear to edge toward the ISS at a very slow pace, keep in mind that both the Cygnus and the station are actually orbiting Earth at a speed of around 17,500 mph. NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick will capture Cygnus using the station’s Canadarm2 robotic arm before...
Perfect results as using pro orbital software but in an easy to use app Offers 6 different kind of map/3D globe Customizable latitude/longitude format Measure units in Km and Km/h or NM and MPH Zoomable movable interactive Map and 3DGlobe showing also night/day areas ...
International Space Station (ISS) inhabitant Samantha Cristoforetti has been talking about the threat that space debris poses to the orbital outpost. With the ISS orbiting Earth at more than 17,000 mph, and withplenty of space junk doing the very same thing, there’s certainly a risk ofaGravit...
NASA's other commercial supplier, Orbital ATK, https://www.orbitalatk.com/ is on track to make a station shipment in just over two weeks following a one-year hiatus caused by its own launch explosion. Barry "Butch" Wilmore begins a spacewalk to wire the International Space Station in pre...
You don't get an approximated position, you get the EXACT position, speed and altitude of the Station updated any 3 second. The route path is visualized over the map to evaluate if the station is coming near your position in the next hours (when meteorological and light condition are adequa...
The ISS zips around Earth at an average speed of 17,500 mph ( 28,000 km/h), completing 16 orbits per day. As the ISS orbits with an inclination of 51.6 degrees, if you live beyond 51.6 degrees north or south of the equator the ISS will never appear directly overhead. The ISS is...
What to expect While the spacecraft will appear to edge toward the ISS at a very slow pace, keep in mind that both the Cygnus and the station are actually orbiting Earth at a speed of around 17,500 mph. NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick will capture Cygnus using the station’s Canadarm2 ...