About 220 miles plus or minus a little.
The sky-lab did the same thing a space station would do
The International Space Station orbits Earth at an average altitude of about 420 kilometers (260 miles).
You can see the space station at night because it reflects sunlight. When the sun shines on the space station, it illuminates its solar panels and other reflective surfaces, making it visible as a bright point moving across the night sky.
Yes, the International Space Station (ISS) can often be seen from Earth and appears as a bright star moving across the sky. The ISS orbits the Earth at a relatively low altitude, making it visible to the naked eye.
To find out when the space station will pass over Chicago, you can use websites like spotthestation.nasa.gov to get the specific times. The sightings usually last for a few minutes and you can see the space station moving across the sky.
the first space station built was the sky lab in 1973.
The sky-lab did the same thing a space station would do
You can never see the I.S.S. from Earth, only in space.
On the 14th of May, 1973.
The International Space Station orbits Earth at an average altitude of about 420 kilometers (260 miles).
You can see the space station at night because it reflects sunlight. When the sun shines on the space station, it illuminates its solar panels and other reflective surfaces, making it visible as a bright point moving across the night sky.
Yes, the International Space Station (ISS) can often be seen from Earth and appears as a bright star moving across the sky. The ISS orbits the Earth at a relatively low altitude, making it visible to the naked eye.
To find out when the space station will pass over Chicago, you can use websites like spotthestation.nasa.gov to get the specific times. The sightings usually last for a few minutes and you can see the space station moving across the sky.
there are many ways. First of, everynight at 12:34 am. You can see it west in the sky
· satellite · Saturn · shooting star · space station · stars · sun
Technically, you can see space itself from anywhere. Outer space, however, can only be seen if you have a view of the sky. Though, since space is a vacuum, you're technically not seeing anything.
If you look up at the right time, you can see the International Space Station arc across the sky.