Space Station Sunrise over the Aleutian Islands

Space Station Sunrise over the Aleutian Islands

Astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) took this panoramic photo looking northeast from a point half-way along the Aleutian Island chain on August 4th 2013. They were flying east at “the top of the orbit”—the northernmost latitude reached by the ISS (51.6 degrees north). If the Sun had been higher, western Alaska would have been visible in the foreground; instead, it lies on the dark side of the day-night line.

This image was taken about 15 minutes after local midnight in early August 2013. From their vantage point at 222 kilometers altitude, the astronauts were able to look northeast and see a near-midnight sunrise (when it was approaching noon in England). The rising Sun makes a red, teardrop-shaped reflection in the lower center of the image—perhaps a reflection within the camera lens, from the window frame, or from some item inside the spacecraft.

Dan Mantel - KnowledgeOrb Contributor

Share
Published by
Dan Mantel - KnowledgeOrb Contributor

Recent Posts

Rocket Launch Long March-2D Yaogan 42-02

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/1_S9tHINK24 China launched Chinese military remote sensing satellite on a Long March 2D rocket from…

6 days ago

Sun 420 Super High…Activity, CME, Flare, Sunspots

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlysKwHI2jw The sun put on an impressive display on 4-17-24 to 4-20-24. Many flares, CMEs…

6 days ago

NASA SpaceX Lunar Elevator of Death!

https://youtu.be/8lT0__zYuJk The NASA SpaceX Human Landing System (HLS) for lunar moon landings requires astronauts to…

2 weeks ago

Two Minutes on Mars

https://youtu.be/LStvPI4IZuY

2 weeks ago

Eclipse Viewed from Space 2024

Live Eclipse streaming images of the 2024 Eclipse. Track the Eclipse totality as it crosses…

3 weeks ago

SpaceX Starships Deadly Design Flaw

While the SpaceX Starship is an engineering marvel, lessons from the past have been lost.…

3 months ago