Skip to main content

Take a ride on the space station from Texas to Maine

NASA astronaut Shane Kimbrough has posted a cool video captured from the International Space Station (ISS), where he’s been living and working since April.

The 24-second sequence shows the U.S and its major cities lit up at night as the station travels from Texas in the south to Maine in the northeast at an altitude of about 250 miles. Look carefully and you’ll spot a storm happening far below, while the end of the video features a sunrise.

“Hope you enjoy the ride from Texas to Maine as seen from Endeavour’s window on [the ] space station!” Kimbrough said in a message accompanying the video.

Hope you enjoy the ride from Texas to Maine as seen from Endeavour’s window on @Space_Station! pic.twitter.com/nwzwSoLgp5

— Shane Kimbrough (@astro_kimbrough) October 9, 2021

As Kimbrough points out, the footage was captured from a window on Endeavour, the SpaceX capsule that flew the company’s first crewed test flight in 2020 and which is now docked at the ISS after bringing the Crew-2 astronauts to space in April.

While the speed of Kimbrough’s video has been increased, the space station is still moving at a steady clip, traveling at 5 miles per second. This means it orbits our planet about once every 90 minutes, resulting in 16 orbits of Earth per day, and therefore 16 sunrises and sunsets.

Spot the station

Fancy turning the tables and watching the ISS as it passes overhead? All you need are clear skies and some patience as you wait for it to head your way. It might pass over your part of the world several times a week, or just once in a month — it all depends where you’re located. Fortunately, NASA has a notification service that alerts you to sightings the day before, so you just need to sign up, enter your ZIP code, and wait. This Digital Trends article tells you how to sign up and offers other tips on spotting the space station.

Aurora

Other spectacular sights viewable from the orbiting outpost include aurora, the beautiful phenomenon that occurs when particles from solar storms meet gases in Earth’s atmosphere. Aurora can be observed back on the ground, too, but the ISS affords a special perspective with Earth down below. Kimbrough’s colleague, French astronaut Thomas Pesquet, recently posted a stunning image of what he said was one of the best auroras he’s ever seen from space.

Pesquet has been spending some of his six-month stint on the ISS capturing incredible shots of Earth, though you might be surprised at how much planning it takes to get the best images. Kimbrough, too, has posted his fair share of amazing photos.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
How to watch the uncrewed Starliner depart the space station and land in the desert
Boeing Space's Starliner docked at the International Space Station in June 2024.

The troubled Boeing Starliner will depart from the International Space Station (ISS) tonight, traveling back to Earth without its crew and bringing an end to its first crewed test flight. After an issue with its thrusters was discovered during the outward journey, several months of testing have not given NASA complete confidence that the spacecraft is safe to carry crew members through the rigors of re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, so the astronauts it carried will stay on the space station while the spacecraft returns home.

NASA is live-streaming the departure of the Starliner from the ISS and its landing in New Mexico, and you can watch both events through the evening and into the night.

Read more
Boeing Starliner to depart space station tomorrow without its crew
Boeing's Starliner spacecraft docked at the space station.

Boeing's troubled Starliner spacecraft is set to depart from the International Space Station tomorrow, Friday, September 6. But it will be traveling without its crew of two NASA astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, who will be staying on the space station until early next year.

The Starliner has had a long wait at the station for what was originally intended to be a one-week trip. After the spacecraft developed an issue with its thrusters during its journey to the station, officials chose to keep it docked while engineers investigated the problem. But more than eight weeks later, it was still not clear exactly what the cause of the issue was or whether it would occur again.

Read more
ISS astronaut’s stunning time-lapse video includes the Milky Way
An image taken from the ISS showing featuring Earth, an aurora, the Milky Way, and the station itself.

A NASA astronaut aboard the International Space Station (ISS) has shared a breathtaking time-lapse video featuring Earth, an aurora, the Milky Way, and the station itself.

Matthew Dominick, who’s been on the orbital outpost since March, shared the amazing 27-second sequence (below) on social media on Sunday.

Read more