Visibility Of The ISS Grows 124
ackthpt writes: "NASA has a feature on the growing visibility of the International Space Station, along with naked-eye Visibility Data when and where to look to see it streaking throught the night sky for US and Non-US cities. Will there be a point where corporate sponsorship hangs an ad in space? Already appearing "as the third brightest star in the nighttime sky", it will eventually be second only to Venus. Will we look up and see a Nike swoosh some day?"
Visibility? (Score:1)
Adds In space. (Score:1)
--Josh
Ads (Score:1)
However, I think that NASA could definitly make some extra cash by signing up for a pay per surf program. Get a few extra dollars for the program with all the tax cuts. If they all use it, they might be able to buy like a new engine or something.
more light pollution (Score:2)
I just can't get terribly excited about the ISS. I think we would get much more bang for the buck with unmanned missions and research on new lift vehicles and propulsion systems.
Like Pizza Hut (Score:1)
Absolutely amazing.
What do the numbers mean ? (Score:1)
i am new to this spacewatching thing.
It says
Moutain View
Aug 23 9:23pm NNW/NNE 3 18
what do the numbers mean ?
Probably no advertising (Score:1)
Lame (Score:1)
Intel conspiracies are sometimes funny.
Microsoft conspiracies are definetly amusing.
But when you start saying that the cosmos has dimmed just so that we may see nike logo's in the sky, I mean, that's just a little far, don't you think? Even for
What next, are you going to say that god (if he or she exists) hates Linux? Heavan runs Windows 2000 and there are no crashes? What are you getting at here?>??
In the future (Score:1)
Re:What do the numbers mean ? (Score:2)
Re:What do the numbers mean ? (Score:1)
Re:What do the numbers mean ? (Score:1)
[grin] First, RTFM (or, in this case, the column headers).
The numbers mean that on August 3, at 9:23pm, the ISS will enter the sky from the North-NorthWest, and exit the sky to the North-NorthEast, that it will be visible for about 3 minutes, and will be about 18 degrees above the horizon at the top of its arc.
HTH.
Corporate ads (Score:1)
If the Nike Swoosh floating in space helps fund additional space exploration and research, who cares? Television and internet ads, as painful as they may be, are a small price to pay for the free programming and information available.
Then again, if it were so bright as to cause light pollution for that same research, f*@k it.
Re:Probably no advertising (Score:1)
I'm sure that once it's nearer to being completed there will be lots of TV coverage and plenty of chance to get your logo seen and associated with the space program (although why Pizza Hut want's to associate itself with space launches is beyond me).
Hrm (Score:1)
Wouldn't increased visibility indicate a lesser proximity to viewer? Read: The damn thing's crashing into Earth. I'm nearly positive this is the case.
Re:more light pollution (hardly) (Score:3)
And if you really care about light pollution, visit the International Dark-Sky Association [darksky.org] and you'll find that light pollution starts at home.
(Perth, Australia: sorry, not visible -- D'oh!)
What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:3)
The sad thing about space ads are (Score:1)
The sad thing about space ads are if history repeats itself the fist space ads will be for p0rn. Sex in it's various forms have always been the first to move into new forms of media.
Leknor
Re:Probably no advertising (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Adds In space. (Score:1)
You're saying that the USA controls every corp in the world? They may think they do, but in actuality they don't even control their own corps.
Art in Space (Score:4)
This reminds me of a 'work of art' that the ESA (European Space Agency) was said to want to put in space some time a go.
A set of really thin mirrors, and equally thin interconnecting wires was to be created which would unfold as this huge structure in space. It was going to look like the thirteen star ring of the Europeanc community, like the one that can be seen on some bumper stickers. It was going to be large enough so that it could clearly be recognized from anywhere on earth in the nighttime with the naked eye.
The project ended being cancelled because it was too controversial. Problems ranging from the setting a possible bad precedent (do we want the sky cluttered with 'art' and advertisements?), to what it would mean to the followers of certain religions led to the demise of the project.
Although it was cancelled, this project proved that putting 'art' or advertisements in space would be not only economically feasible, but as a matter of fact, relatively cheap, as the 'art' would take only a fraction of the payload of a modern rocket.
IMO with a cost of a few million, some crazy millionaire or corporation is bound to try something similar sooner or later. But, I think they will be quite unpopular; the last thing I personally want to see when I look up at the sky is something man made. Much less something that is close to being omnipresent.
Red Dwarf, anyone? (Score:2)
Not visible in Singapore (Score:1)
"sorry, not visible" under the row for my country
Re:Hrm (Score:1)
I don't care if they puts ads in space. but if you think about it they would use lower orbiting ads so they wouldn't have to be as large.
Besides night swimming I'm usually not far enought away from the city lights to see stars and stuff so I wouldn't care. But I would take the time to see some of my (least) favorite company's space ads burn as they fell back into the atmosphere.
I can imagine the flaming Windows logo now :~)
Leknor
Ads in the sky (Score:1)
It may take a LOT of energy, but more than enough can be right at the doors of a nuclear powerplant.
It was invented on 60's (or 50's?) but the main problem would be ppl suing the gov for it. And also there could be tampering, ie. drawing a joint in the mouth of the president on campaign... Well, maybe that could get him some extra points, who knows ;)
My $.02
Why would they bother? (Score:1)
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
The real question is... (Score:1)
Re:more light pollution (hardly) (Score:3)
You also mischaracterize the particular experiment. It isn't about "fuel efficiency", it's about getting more gasoline from a barrel of oil by improving the efficiency of cracking (the "hydrogen storage" angle in the article is even more of a long shot). That doesn't improve energy efficiency or greenhouse gas emissions. There are much simpler ways of achieving better fuel efficiency, foremost by taxing gas guzzlers like SUVs.
As for light pollution, you can escape from city lights by putting your telescopes in remote places, but you can't escape from shiny objects orbiting the earth. At best, you can try to avoid having them pass through your field of view.
www.Heavens-above.com (Score:5)
5 minutes (Score:1)
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gal lery/images/station/ [nasa.gov]
Re:Visibility? (Score:2)
Horizon Angles (Score:2)
Re:Adds In space. (Score:1)
Thus unwittingly laying the ground for the First Interstellar War, since the Gug had already placed an order for the construction of an Earth-orbiting billboard advertising their Gug-warez.
--
Twinkle, twinkle, little star... (Score:1)
I can see it's just an ad,
for a space-born Laundr-o-mat.
Ok, so my poem sucks. Give me a break, it's 2 AM and English's not even my first language.
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
I guess that is one of the limitations of that geostationary thing.
That did piss me off..... for up to about 2 seconds. Then I realized who was footing the bill, You guys are welcome to both the view and the bill !!!
How good are your eyes (Score:1)
Why the ad obsession? (Score:2)
Give me a break. What's with Slashdot's obsession with advertising? I'd understand predictions of commercialization of the sky in a story about the Pizza Hut ad on a rocket, but what does the brightness of the space station have to do with ads in space (besides the obvious, which any dummy could figure out)?
Next Slashdot story: "Scientists discover anti-gravity. What next, hovering ads that follow you around???"
LS
Re:The real question is... (Score:1)
Molotov cocktails. Now *there's* an effective junkbuster.
--
My name is Sue,
How do you do?
Now you gonna die!
Re:Adds In space. (Score:2)
Deo
Wot? (Score:1)
Oh well, at least we've still got the Magellenic Clouds.
Re:first! (Score:1)
Moderators == Idiots
And why the fuck can't I browse at 0 AND BELOW??? I don't want to be distracted by all pro-Linux and OpenSource crap that gets posted here when I'm reading the Trolls.
And why the fuck are all Trolls marked as -1.
ALL TROLLS ARE NOT EQUAL!!!
Lameass Slashdot mod system should have -1 all the way up to -5 Troll for the best. Stop the fucking discrimination!!!
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
Sure, it may not be the best seat in the house, but if the ISS was in a geostationary orbit, like you say, it would be over the equator, and thus as much of the Southern Hemisphere could see as the Northern hemisphere. You would still be wrong
There will not be ads in space (Score:1)
Re:Lame ... sheez (Score:1)
Sure, but the ISS is not a huge glowing ball that has fusion reaction going inside.
If you are looking for the ISS, (Score:1)
Bob.
Coke vs. Pepsi (Score:1)
What increased visibility can mean (Score:1)
When something becomes more visible, it can mean one of a few things: (1) it is getting closer, (2) it is getting brighter (or rather, more in contrast with its background, which could also mean darker in some contexts), or (3) it is getting bigger.
The ISS is (3) getting bigger. The participating nations are co-operating to put more modules into orbit and hook them together into space station parts. It's not going to be crashing anytime soon.
-- Guges --
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:1)
[Happosai]
The word "some" is bold??? (Score:1)
)O(
Never underestimate the power of stupidity
Useful Toy (Score:1)
I heartily recommend pocketsat [palmgear.com] for all the palm people out there...
That and a compass keyring, and you can find it dead easily. (Roughly once every 1.5 hrs post-sunset...)
I wonder how long it'll take me to get a GPS for my palm so I can get rid of the keyring...
And no, I didn't write it, I just think it's cool.
But then again, I'm sad (Apparently) (Or has that all changed in the era of Geek-Chic?)
Ads... or whatever else. (Score:2)
Whatever one finds in a mail-bin, could appear in the sky.
But, if the pollution rises, nobody will be able to see it through the smog.
My bet is that it will be considered as pollution and thus forbidden, like the noise.
And if it's ever accepted and performed, then I bet that if Nike sells caps, it will be to people willing not to see their ads in the sky.
Until then, a solution would be to declare the Sky as part of the UNESCO's Patrimony so that it will virtually become impossible to soil it.
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Re:more light pollution (Score:2)
ravers are people too!
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
You wouldn't see it move if it was Gestationary...
It's in a near-earth orbit, so it shifts (A lot). Usually takes about 10 minutes to transit the sky...
EG: I'm in Amsterdam, when we (+wife) see it disappear, she goes and ICQ's her dad (In Moscow) and he goes outside just in time to see it appear...
17000 MPH is pretty fast...
Re:Corporate ads (Score:1)
The night sky is beautiful, who want's to see a frigging Nike logo up there? Not I.
Re:The sad thing about space ads are (Score:1)
I actually _like_ sex.
Bloody slashdot eunichs.
OT: Karma Whore (Score:1)
Re: Visibility? (Score:1)
It's very unlikely though that you'll see something more than just a bright spot with binoculars.
Greetings, Roland
Re:www.Heavens-above.com (Score:1)
http://www.heavens-above. com/orbitdisplay.asp?satid=25544 [heavens-above.com]
--
Jonathan Hunt
Re:Lame ... sheez (Score:1)
Sure, but the ISS is not a huge glowing ball that has fusion reaction going inside.
Not yet anyway...
"... That probably would have sounded more commanding if I wasn't wearing my yummy sushi pajamas..."
Re:Visibility? (Score:2)
Correct, they hardly complete any failures.
big money in a free market economy (Score:1)
My bet is that it will be considered as pollution and thus forbidden, like the noise.
sorry Mirko, but my bet is that if the money is there, they will do it. There will be a lot of righteous noise and heartrending, but then somebody will come along and offer to donate x billion to a worthy cause (that is, a cause considered worthy by those people that could block the space advert, like the US government), and up it will go.
It's the free market economy for goodness sake, try to block it in the name of keeping space clean / scientific progress / human values and some corporate will claim that you're blocking their right under the first amendment to free speech or something like it. Maybe they 'll even sue and make the environmental groups pay for it...
I give it 20 years.
Re:Visibility? (Score:2)
---
Re: big money in a free market economy (Score:2)
First amendment is American.
The sky isn't (only).
Let the American do whatever they want with the stars they put on their banner.
If they touch the ones that shin in the sky, I am not sure the UNO or whoever else will agree.
Don't forget that there are much more Americanophobic muslims than American guys over there.
Would they accept to read some American brand while sleeping outside ?
There are far cheaper ways to be impopular.
--
Re:Visibility? (Score:2)
troc
Fake (Score:1)
Of course, as many of those non-beilvers that this dispels, how many more UFO sightings will be reported after seeing the ISS's streak in the sky?
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:1)
Re:In the future (Score:1)
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:1)
Re:Not visible in Singapore (Score:1)
Patience, grasshopper.
Re:Visibility? (Score:4)
A geostationary (or geosynchronous) orbit is one in which the object's logititude doesn't change due to its orbit (about 24,000 miles) -- at this height and speed, it moves around the earth at the same rate the earth spins. Running to stand still, if you will. If that orbit is over the equator, then it will be a stationary spot. If it's anywhere else, it WILL change latitude but not longititude. Not much use for this since spy satellites have to be closer and anything else wants to maintain an area of coverage, but it can and has been done.
The ISS is in an inclined orbit somewhere between 200 and 300 miles up, IIRC. So it will 'fly over' a variety of areas both above and below the hemisphere, covering a path centered on the equator (Man, a picture WOULD be worth all these words...). When it happens to be over your neck of the woods, if you're close enough to the equator (apparently, it's a relatively high inclination if people in New Zealand will be able to see it), is merely a question of time
Someone said it will eventually be "second [in brightness] only to Venus" when finished -- that should be second to THE MOON -- it'll be brighter than Venus when completed.
Xentax
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:1)
Maybe you're one of those who needs it spelled out for you in a convenient moral ending, or maybe the concept of "dystopian novel" isn't quite solid in your worldview.
Re:Lame (Score:1)
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
ISS is NOT in geostationary orbit. There's a very good reason for that. The #*$&% shuttle is incapable of reaching geostationary orbit.
Our wonderful space shuttle fleet will take you anywhere you want to go, as long as where you want to go is low Earth orbit. *sigh*
Re:Wot? (Score:1)
Thusly: The ISS is in a 51.6 degree inclined orbit. Signapore is a maximum of 2 degrees latitude off of the equator. You can't miss the ISS from Signapore. As for Australia, Tazmania is about as far south as the Australian region goes on my map, and that's at 42 degrees south latitude. Still within the visible range.
However... due to the rotation of the earth, the ISS' orbit appears to continuously "shift" across the face of the earth. In Signapore's case, the ISS won't be visible there until September 3, after which it will pass overhead every 90 minutes for about two weeks. Tazmania, on the other hand, can see the ISS beginning just before dawn on August 25 and going for at least two weeks, if not longer.
Here's a URL [heavens-above.com].
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
Oh, and there are souther hemisphere countries invovled as well. Brazil signed on several years ago.
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
Not to mention they say it is the third brightes star. The ISS is not a star, neither are Venus or the moon.
But it seems that NASA's original page is partly to blame for this:
It is visible to the naked eye as a (not-so-faint-anymore) star, if the sky is without overcast and haze. As ISS assembly continues over the next four-five years, the light dot will grow to a brilliant star in the morning or evening skies, second only in brightness to the planet Venus, the brightest object (besides the moon) in the morning or evening.
Re:Art in Space (man-made meteors?) (Score:1)
But what about a temporary display? I think a man-made meteor shower (in lieu of your typical fireworks show) would absolutely rock!
Think about it - a space-based launch facility full of BB-sized or marble-sized projectiles (or whatever, I'm not a scientist...), chemically treated to flare up in colors that change over the duration of the burn. Maybe they could even be synchronized so that they would literally paint the night sky with whatever image or message was wanted..
...and so what if it would end up being a giant Coke logo or whatever, it would still be pretty freakin cool to look at!
Sean
Problem: Sky is getting crowded (Score:2)
This is a problem, as it will be more difficult in the future to block out these objects from telescopes. So why not do it for them? Same problem with the irridium satelites... is there any good reason for their color now? Sure, it will still pass in front of stars from time to time, but it will be better than the way it is now.
I don't see a good excuse NOT to black it out.
-Ben
Cunfused about orbital mechanics (Score:2)
I could understand if it were in a really low orbit that it came overhead once ever two hours, but then shouldn't it tend in the same direction? and then another 20 hours till we see it again?
confused.
Heaven, W2K, magic smoke, and cellophane. (Score:1)
While I don't believe in heaven, I do believe in magic smoke. Permit me to elaborate:
Everything runs on magic smoke. There is a simple demonstration of this: take off one of your boots and whack your monitor a few times with it. You should hear a hiss--that's the magic smoke escaping. When the hiss stops no more magic smoke will remain inside, and your monitor will cease to function. Similarly, if you overclock your chip without sufficient cooling the chip will start to release its magic smoke. Same principle. Why do overheated cars stop running? Acute loss of magic smoke. "Houston, we have a problem. We seem to be jetisoning something into space." Again, magic smoke.
Computer software runs on magic smoke too, as we all know. This is why it is so exhausting to write code--magic smoke goes from our brains to being wrapped around the symbols in our emacsen; we replenish the magic smoke in our bodies by drinking cola (that's what's in those little bubbles). Compilers merely concentrate the magic smoke so that it can do something useful, like propagate an Outlook virus or somesuch. Open Source projects like the Linux operating system let magic smoke escape every time people poke and prod at the code, particularly people who work in unsealed environments like apartment buildings or university computer labs. This is inevitable, rather like how the magic smoke excapes whenever you open the door to your microwave oven. Win2k, on the other hand, is created in a hermetically sealed, corporate environment so the magic smoke has nowhere to go. Its magic smoke stays put, and this is why W2K and the Closed Source design model wins out over Linux and its Open Source development--that is, until we start writing Linux while wrapped in celophane.
This isn't rocket science, people.
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:2)
There's a joke that goes like this: in the cold war both the US and USSR sent missions to the moon, at the same time. The US astronauts arrived at the moon first, and started picking up rocks, etc. Then came the russians, and they started painting the moon red.
The american astronauts thought it was better to call NASA: "Hey, Houston, the russians are painting the moon red", they said. "It's OK, just let them", was the answer they got from NASA, "just tell us when they're finished".
So the russians painted the moon red, went back to their spaceship, and back to Earth. The american astronauts called NASA again: "OK, they've finished -- what now? Do we clean it all?", they asked.
"No... just paint the Coca-Cola logo on it".
--
Re:Problem: Sky is getting crowded (Score:1)
if it was black it would collect large amounts of heat and it would damage it.
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:2)
Robert Heinlein is one of my favorite authors. Another of his books is Tunnel in the Sky, about a students dropped on a planet and left to survive for a short period, but something goes wrong. I think it'd make a killer flick, if done better than that hunk of Hollywood cheese Starship Troopers.
Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
Re:Visibility? (Score:1)
Heat Absorbtion Re:Problem: Sky is getting crowded (Score:3)
Re:Art in Space (man-made meteors?) (Score:1)
Wait a while, Iridium's gonna go down soon.
-- Bucket
Re:That would be the most expensive ad ever! (Score:2)
I thought paying an athlete $70 million (or whatever its up to now) for endorsements was pretty blatant. People aren't stomping around outraged so, what's the threshold? Once we get over our ire, what's the next threshold? Etc.
Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
Remember when the 7UP guy tried it? (Score:1)
Who's been messing with my laser?
Re:Cunfused about orbital mechanics (Score:2)
Re:Art in Space (Score:2)
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:2)
The movie was OK in it's own right, compared to other mindless Sci-fi action films. (It didn't suck as badly as Judge Dredd, for example) They should have just given it another title; or at least had CGI battlesuits to oppose the CGI bugs.
"The axiom 'An honest man has nothing to fear from the police'
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:1)
Re:What one SF author thought 50+ years ago... (Score:2)
Yes, as an action shootem up with a little sex thrown in to titilate. It certainly lived up to my low expections of Hollywood.
The social interaction and exploration is the real story in Tunnel in the Sky. Sadly, if Hollywood makes a film about it, it'll be lamebrained with CGI animals and T-Rexes and other crap taking center stage. I've considered writing (as an exercise) a screenplay of this book, but wouldn't dream of producing it unless I won the Lotto.
Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
Re:Art in Space (Score:2)
Especially if it's the size of Skylab and coming straight toward you . .
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Re:Visibility? (Score:2)
It's impossible to orbit a satellite that can't be seen from at least some parts of the southern hemisphere.
A worst case scenario would be a satellite orbiting just above the atmospheric limit, right over the equator, which would only be visible within a strip along the equator. Even so, since the atmospheric limit is roughly 150km, we are talking about a pretty wide strip.
As far as the ISS is concerned, I imagine the orbit is inclined with respect to the equator by a considerable ammount, so there should be plenty of viewing opportunities for most of the world. Extreme latitudes (northern Norway, Alaska, Tierra del Fuego) are probably left out in the cold. Ummm... you know what I mean.
Re:Visibility? (Score:2)
Is that a soccer field?
Re:Nuke the moon (Score:2)
Why? As a preemptive strike?