Wednesday, October 17, 2012

International Space Station Visible Over Ireland/UK Tonight

Ireland and Britain from space, as seen from the ISS. Image NASA

The 500-tonne International Space Station (ISS) will be visible in the night sky over Ireland and the UK this evening and every night up to 30 October (see times/trajectory below). 

With clearing skies away from southern and western coastal areas this evening, the $100billion craft will be visible as an extremely bright 'star' moving across the sky from right to left.  The most expensive object ever built by mankind will take approximately 10 minutes to cross the sky (7:51-8.01pm).

On board the craft at present are five men and one woman - the only six astronauts in space at present. They will be joined by two visiting craft over the next two weeks and you can see all this happen as ISS will be visible every night until October 30th.

"You can't miss ISS because it is up to 100 times brighter than the brightest star in the sky! It's that bright!" said David Moore, Editor of Astronomy Ireland magazine who has been predicting and watching ISS since the first module was launched in 1998.

"As mankind's only space laboratory Irish people will be seeing space history in the making. Similar to the craft that took Columbus to the Americas. It's that important to space exploration," he said.

Viewing opportunities tonight will vary depending on your location due to variable cloud cover.


The International Space Station is the largest spacecraft ever to be put into orbit, and the most expensive thing ever built, at approximately €100 billion. The huge craft is roughly the size of Croke Park, and its massive solar panels reflect sunlight, making it appear extremely bright when seen from Earth. It current has a crew of six astronauts on board, made of five men and one woman.

Track the ISS in real-time HERE. More information on the International Space Station can be found at www.astronomy.ie/iss.



For more time-lapse imagery, visit the NASA website: http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/Videos/CrewEarthObservationsVideos. From here, NASA invites you to download videos or stills to enjoy or perhaps even create an ISS time-lapse video production of your own.

Tim Murphy from Boherbue in Co Cork captured this image of the International Space Station (ISS) zooming across the skies over Millstreet, Co Cork, on Thursday, 28 April 2011.
This image of Ireland was taken on the 28th April 2011 at 18.30 GMT from the International Space Station as it passed over the UK.
The east coast of Ireland, as well as the Welsh coastline, is clearly visible. The weather conditions on the ground at the time were hazy which created this obscure but beautiful capture.