NASA's New Widget helps locate ISS for viewing from Earth.

Press Release Summary:



Companion tool to NASA's Spot the Station service facilitates information sharing regarding where and when to see the International Space Station (ISS) from Earth. Created by International Space Station Program, this widget can be embedded by organizations on their websites to make said service available for those who want to view the station as it flies overhead. At spotthestation.nasa.gov/widget, visitors can test this widget and find instructions on how to embed it.



Original Press Release:



New Spot the Station Tool Expands Ground-to-Space Connection



WASHINGTON -- When the International Space Station is visible from Earth - typically at dawn and dusk - it is the night sky's second brightest object, after the moon. A new companion tool to NASA's popular Spot the Station service makes it easier to share information about where and when to see the orbital laboratory. The International Space Station Program has created a widget that organizations can easily embed on their websites, making the service broadly available for people who want to catch a glimpse of the station as it flies overhead.



Test the widget and find instructions on how to embed it via NASA's website: https://spotthestation.nasa.gov/widget/. 



More than 350,000 people currently track morning, evening or both types of sightings via Spot the Station alerts. 



"Humans have been living on the space station continuously for 15 years now, conducting valuable research to improve life on Earth while supporting NASA's journey to Mars," said Sam Scimemi, division director for the International Space Station Program at NASA Headquarters.



"It is rewarding - and great fun--when someone first sees the station from the ground. It is a wonderful connection for anyone with an interest in space research, or a curiosity about life off this planet."



This week, the space station reached its 100,000th orbit, since its first component, the Zarya cargo module, launched Nov. 20, 1998.



The International Space Station's trajectory passes over more than 90 percent of Earth's population. The service is designed to only notify users of passes that are high enough in the sky to be easily visible over trees, buildings and other objects on the horizon. NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston calculates the sighting information several times a week for more than 4,700 locations worldwide.



CONTACT: Tabatha Thompson, Headquarters, Washington, 202-358-4811, tabatha.t.thompson@nasa.gov

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