🛰️ Live ISS Tracker 🌍

Track the International Space Station in real-time and explore the cosmos

🛰️ Current ISS Location

🛰️
Live Tracking Active
Latitude -21.2271°
Longitude 160.2258°

📹 Live ISS Stream

LIVE FROM ISS
▶️

Click to watch the live ISS stream on NASA's official YouTube channel.

🌙 Current Moon Phase

Phase First Quarter
Illumination 56.9%
Age 8 days

🌙 Moonrise & Moonset Times

Moonrise 12:24
Moonset 00:01
Location Default Location
Date 8/2/2025

Star of the Day

Name Polaris
Constellation Ursa Minor
Distance 433 light-years
Magnitude 1.98
Temperature 6,015 K
Spectral Type F7 Class F
Polaris, the North Star, is located nearly in line with Earth's rotational axis, making it appear stationary in the night sky. It's actually a multiple star system.

🌌 NASA Picture of the Day

NASA APOD

Fireflies, Meteors, and Milky Way

Taken on July 29 and July 30, a registered and stacked series of exposures creates this dreamlike view of a northern summer night. Multiple firefly flashes streak across the foreground as the luminous Milky Way arcs above the horizon in the Sierra de Órganos national park of central Mexico, The collection of bright streaks aligned across the sky toward the upper left in the timelapse image are Delta Aquariid meteors. Currently active, the annual Delta Aquarid meteor shower shares August nights though, overlapping with the better-known Perseid meteor shower. This year that makes post-midnight, mostly moonless skies in early August very popular with late night skygazers. How can you tell a Delta Aquariid from a Perseid meteor? The streaks of Perseid meteors can be traced back to an apparent radiant in the constellation Perseus. Delta Aquariids appear to emerge from the more southerly constellation Aquarius, beyond the top left of this frame. Of course, the bioluminescent flashes of fireflies are common too on these northern summer nights. But how can you tell a firefly from a meteor? Just try to catch one.

🔴 NASA Mars Weather Report

Sol 3742
Temperature -19°C
Pressure 827 Pa

🌌 Timeline of the Universe

Big Bang

The beginning of the universe, approximately 13.8 billion years ago.

Formation of the Milky Way

Our galaxy forms around 13.6 billion years ago.

First Stars

The first stars light up the universe about 13 billion years ago.

International Space Station

Launched in 1998, the ISS is a symbol of international cooperation in space.

You

The culmination of billions of years of cosmic evolution.