Bright star visible, is it the Space Station?
Bright star visible, is it the Space Station?
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Discussion

RichB

Original Poster:

54,351 posts

301 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
quotequote all
There is a very bright object visible in the sky looking south west at about 35 deg above the horizon for the last week or so. I wondered if it's the International Space Station? I've just had a look and it's so bright I am sure I can see giant wings on it through my binoculars confused

Jasandjules

71,338 posts

246 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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Venus?

Pupp

12,604 posts

289 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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Jupiter

RichB

Original Poster:

54,351 posts

301 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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Don't look like a planet to me, are you sure?

colonel c

7,960 posts

256 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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Uranus.


getmecoat

timbob

2,182 posts

269 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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It's Venus.

Check out http://www.stellarium.org/ - a real time "what's in the sky right now" program - pretty cool.

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

272 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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Moth..?

Hedders

24,460 posts

264 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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If it is still there it is not the space station . HTH

Simpo Two

89,628 posts

282 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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Yep, the space station orbits.

driverrob

4,817 posts

220 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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A bright object in the sky visible before any stars is usually Venus. The space station is not so bright and moves across the sky pretty fast.

srebbe64

13,021 posts

254 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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It's Venus - it's particularly bright at the moment.

If the space station has stopped moving then we should all don our hard hats!

RichB

Original Poster:

54,351 posts

301 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
quotequote all
srebbe64 said:
It's Venus - it's particularly bright at the moment.

If the space station has stopped moving then we should all don our hard hats!
OK I'll take your word for it that it's Venus but it's not so daft to think it could be the Space Station, it could be in the same place for a long time surely? I thought that's what a geo-stationary orbit means? Always over the same spot, like the Astra satellite for TV?

tonyvid

9,884 posts

260 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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RichB said:
srebbe64 said:
It's Venus - it's particularly bright at the moment.

If the space station has stopped moving then we should all don our hard hats!
OK I'll take your word for it that it's Venus but it's not so daft to think it could be the Space Station, it could be in the same place for a long time surely? I thought that's what a geo-stationary orbit means? Always over the same spot, like the Astra satellite for TV?
Geo stationary does mean just that but they are positioned abour 36,000km away to keep them in the same position. The ISS is about 200ish miles up(it varies a bit) so needs to bomb around at 17k mph to stop falling in your garden. It is Venus and is quite amazingly bright at the moment. smile

RichB

Original Poster:

54,351 posts

301 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
quotequote all
Well thanks chaps, I like to know these things, I'll go have another look through my 'noculars. smile

I remember a bout 8 or 9 years ago seeing the Bob Hailey Commet for a few days, I'm always looking at the stars but never really know what I'm looking at biggrin

Simpo Two

89,628 posts

282 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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RichB said:
I remember a bout 8 or 9 years ago seeing the Bob Hailey Commet for a few days, I'm always looking at the stars but never really know what I'm looking at biggrin
Evidently! Just call them 'stars' and move along wink

moleamol

15,887 posts

280 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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RichB said:
Well thanks chaps, I like to know these things, I'll go have another look through my 'noculars. smile

I remember a bout 8 or 9 years ago seeing the Bob Hailey Commet for a few days, I'm always looking at the stars but never really know what I'm looking at biggrin
The space station orbits the Earth once every 91 minutes so when you do see it it will be moving pretty fast.

If you are out looking round with binoculars have a look for the Pleiades constellation, looks brilliant through binoculars, a bit like a smudge to the naked eye: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiades_(star_cluste...

renmure

4,692 posts

241 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
quotequote all
timbob said:
It's Venus.

Check out http://www.stellarium.org/ - a real time "what's in the sky right now" program - pretty cool.
Great Program.
Hours of fun ahead. Many thanks smile

central

16,745 posts

234 months

jimothy

5,151 posts

254 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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driverrob said:
A bright object in the sky visible before any stars is usually Venus. The space station is not so bright and moves across the sky pretty fast.
And flashes red and green lights. Was watching it in Zambia last November with binoculars - could see the lights, but nothing else. Amazing to watch.

srebbe64

13,021 posts

254 months

Saturday 31st January 2009
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RichB said:
Well thanks chaps, I like to know these things, I'll go have another look through my 'noculars. smile

I remember a bout 8 or 9 years ago seeing the Bob Hailey Commet for a few days, I'm always looking at the stars but never really know what I'm looking at biggrin
Evidently this is true. Neither of those bodies are stars. One is a planet and the other is a comet - and neither is a space station in geostationary orbit.