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International Space Station Moves Across Moon (PHOTO)

/ The Huffington Post     First Posted: 01/09/12 12:49 PM ET   Updated: 01/09/12 06:21 PM ET

Two photographers have snapped spectacular portraits of the International Space Station streaking across the night sky, catching the orbiting lab crossing the moon and slipping by Jupiter.

In one series of photos, NASA photographer Lauren Harnett captured images of the moon at the exact moment that the space station passed across its face in what scientists call a "transit."

Harnett took the photos on Wednesday (Jan. 4) from NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. She then combined several images into a composite view that shows the space station just before and after it crossed the moon's disk. (Story continues below photo.)

"She had to struggle with a window of visibility limited by fog and clouds, and I think she got some excellent results," said NASA spokesman Mike Gentry at the space center. [See the space station and moon photos]

The International Space Station is the largest spacecraft ever built, with a main truss that is longer than a football field.  It is currently home to six men (three Russians, two Americans and a Dutch astronaut) and flies 240 miles (390 kilometers) above Earth at a speed of about 17,500 mph (28,000 kph).

At its brightest, the space station can outshine the planet Venus and be easily spotted with the unaided eye by skywatchers who know where to look.

"The space station can be seen in the night sky with the naked eye, and a pair of field binoculars may reveal some detail of the structural shape of the spacecraft," NASA officials explained in an image description.

In Harnett's photos, the moon appears in crystal-clear detail, and the shape of the space station's huge solar arrays and backbone-like main truss can be recognized.

Harnett was not the only one to photograph the space station this week.

On Thursday (Jan. 5), photographer Mike Killian spotted the space station from central Florida as it passed near the bright planet Jupiter.

The space station "made a six-minute pass over central FL last night," Killian told SPACE.com in an email. "Viewing conditions were perfect."

There are several websites that can help amateur and seasoned skywatchers alike prepare for a night of space station and satellite observing.

Another good site is this one, which provides real-time satellite tracking and shows at any given moment during the day or night where over Earth the space station or shuttle happen to be.    

(Below, see some pictures of bigger things passing by the moon. Story continues after slideshow.)

The International Space Station is not the only satellite that can be spotted by the unaided eye. Other bright satellites, such as China's Tiangong 1 space laboratory, can be seen from the Earth without telescopes (as could NASA's space shuttles, before they were retired in 2011).

And seeing satellites from Earth is not a one-time event. The International Space Station, for example, has been orbiting Earth since 1998 and completes one trip around the planet every 90 minutes.

"It's certainly not something that's limited to happening just a few times a year," Gentry said.

Editor's note: If you snapped an amazing photo the space station or any other skywatching sight and would like to share it with SPACE.com, contact managing editor Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com.

You can follow Tariq Malik on Twitter @tariqjmalik. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.



Copyright 2011 Space, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Two photographers have snapped spectacular portraits of the International Space Station streaking across the night sky, catching the orbiting lab crossing the moon and slipping by Jupiter. In o...
Two photographers have snapped spectacular portraits of the International Space Station streaking across the night sky, catching the orbiting lab crossing the moon and slipping by Jupiter. In o...
 
 
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Euglena Vorticella
END "SPECIAL RIGHTS," TAX CHURCHES & HATE GROUPS
12:25 PM on 01/11/2012
I remember seeing Echo, the giant foil space balloon in 1959 or 1960
02:06 PM on 01/10/2012
WERE IN A BAD TWILIGHT ZONE..DIDNT YOU NO THAT?
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SecularJoe
If a belief gives you comfort then it is suspect
01:25 PM on 01/10/2012
OK, I'm going to ask. Why are there no stars? Does earth atmosphere really magnify them so we can see them. Pictures from the moon are also absent stars.
04:39 PM on 01/10/2012
Very good question. There are no stars in the photo because if the camera were adjusted to pick up the stars the moon would appear too bright and would only be a blur. This is the same reason there are no stars in the moon landing photos.
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SecularJoe
If a belief gives you comfort then it is suspect
12:03 PM on 01/11/2012
Thank you!
06:32 PM on 01/10/2012
Jody is correct. I photograph both stars and moon, but it is quite impossible to do both at the same time. A star photo needs a full second or more exposure depending on how many stars you wish to have; 30 seconds at f2.8 will reveal the milky way for instance. But the moon is so bright I use 1/40th of a second or faster exposure times and NO stars are visible.
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SecularJoe
If a belief gives you comfort then it is suspect
12:04 PM on 01/11/2012
Thank You!
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Tracy Herrera Lee
09:22 AM on 01/10/2012
I remember the good old days when America was number one in space travel, now we have to pay the Commies to get a ride up there and soon the Chinese will dominate all of it, but hey, we can pay our food stamp people more money now. God help us if we need a GPS satellite repaired.
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Counterintuitive
We'll steer by the beacon of our 100 year forecast
05:33 PM on 01/10/2012
I don't necessarily agree with your premise, but ...

If you regret that communist countries were dominating space, wouldn't the solution be to make your country more communist?
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Tracy Herrera Lee
06:14 PM on 01/10/2012
My grandfather killed Communists in the war and I have no use for them except for maybe target practice.
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Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
10:50 PM on 01/10/2012
I couldn't agree more! Fanned and faved!
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Tracy Herrera Lee
11:11 PM on 01/10/2012
Thanks!
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Peter Ruzzo
08:12 AM on 01/10/2012
Cue up Pink Floyd.
07:29 AM on 01/10/2012
It looks like a scene from STAR WARS
with little space ships and all.
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CarlIII
Liberal Virginian living in Remlap Alabama
08:56 AM on 01/10/2012
I saw the same thing lol.
10:34 AM on 01/12/2012
That's no moon. It's a space station.
07:17 AM on 01/10/2012
She? Space station is a thing, an it.
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CarlIII
Liberal Virginian living in Remlap Alabama
09:03 AM on 01/10/2012
My Mustang GT is a she. Most ships are called "She". The reason is they are beautiful, stubborn, temperamental, and always get their way. But you love them just the same.
09:36 AM on 01/10/2012
Quaint, curious and stupid "tradition". Ships, like cars and other inanimate objects are just inanimate objects with no gender.
03:45 AM on 01/10/2012
If you do take a pair of binoculars out at night in order to see the space station in orbit around the moon---keep a sharp eye out for trouble-makers who might accuse you of being a Peeping Tom. This actually happened in San Diego, Calilfornia, when a college astronomy teacher set up a small telescope in a vacant field at night and near an apartment house so as to view or orbiting artificial satellite up in the night sky. A suspicious woman happened to see him looking through the telescope and called the police and he had to explain he was an amateur astronomer. The event was described in a San Diego newspaper. Another guy in Los Angeles took a large pair of binoculars to look at another orbiting satellite up in the sky and some jerk accused him of being a Peeping Tom trying to look at young couples making love in a public park.
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metusmetu
Sine Metu
02:41 AM on 01/10/2012
How'd that streaking dude get from the football field,............all the way up by the moon??!
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catboycolo
I'll have the coffee, not the KoolAid
01:22 AM on 01/10/2012
Neat images, except the story is incorrect on one fact...it also caught the ISS during its transit, not just before and after.
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Frank Lee Mydear
04:35 AM on 01/10/2012
Like most writers at HuffPo, they don't proofread. I probably wouldn't have caught it as a mistake, either. Earlier in the paragraph the writer does mention the photographer photographing the transit :

"...NASA photographer Lauren Harnett captured images of the moon at the exact moment that the space station passed across its face in what scientists call a "transit.""

and the line you refer to:

"She then combined several images into a composite view that shows the space station just before and after it crossed the moon's disk."

Which to be more accurate, only needed the word "also" in the right place:

"She then combined several images into a composite view that (also) shows the space station just before and after it crossed the moon's disk."

On whole, the story isn't inaccurate, both points are covered, just not together. The use of one word would have clarified it.
05:20 PM on 01/10/2012
If you look you can see the station in front of the moon 5 times. The missing word was "during". Should have been before, during and after it crossed the moon's disk... Wow... Journalists be on top of it this year... That's what you get with them just slapping stories together in the minutes it must take them to do so. Reminds me of the nut shot the defunct Rocky Mountain News made some years ago during the Missionary Ridge fires. How can editors miss these things? Don't they pass it around to several people. I caught it in seconds. I'm not English major, daily editor or writer... How hard can it be?
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01:08 AM on 01/10/2012
Thanks for the story. I didn't know you could see satellites so often. Now I have an idea what I was seeing!
11:49 PM on 01/09/2012
That's just your basic Empire issue TIE fighter. Darth Vader and I were throwing around ideas over a couple of cold brews for this years election and we came up with the Empire taking over Earth instead of Santorum or Romney destroying us.
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Kritikos
Intelligence is not a science
11:40 PM on 01/09/2012
Warning!.....Danger Will Robinson,..............danger.
12:03 AM on 01/10/2012
malakies sto tetragwno
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Kritikos
Intelligence is not a science
09:39 AM on 01/10/2012
..........extreme danger...........aliens detected.
10:30 PM on 01/09/2012
It doesn't look like the space station
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MsLadyBlueWorld
10:04 PM on 01/09/2012
it's 2012 you're likely to see anything strange this year and more to come too bad that meteor shower didn't pop off.