Space Craft All photos taken by and © Bruce G. Marcot.
A passage of the International Space Station
This is an animated GIF movie of the ISS (1.86MB) that I took 8 February 2003, from near Portland, Oregon.
It was an exceptionally bright view of the ISS.
Each image is a 2-second timelapse still photo taken by a digital camera mounted on a tripod. In each frame, the ISS appears as a short dash because or the timelapse image. I moved the camera twice during the passage to capture the full view of the passage.
A passage of the International Space Station & Space Shuttle Atlantis ...
I took the following sequence of pictures on 15 October 2002 from Tigard, Oregon (south of Portland) during a single passage of the International Space Station (ISS).
At the time, the space shuttle Atlantis was attached to the ISS.
Each image is a time lapse of 8 seconds, so the ISS-Atlantis looks like an extended line in the sky.
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Here's the ISS just emerging from behind an Oregon white oak, just past the meridian of its passage with a maximum altitude of 49 degrees, at 19:33:53, and the closest-approach distance of 515 km.
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These are all 8-second timelapse images, taken with a digital camera with a 0.45x extra-wide angle lens. Here, the ISS has moved further along in its northeast trajectory.
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From the bottom right corner, a rival appears -- a commercial aircraft.
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A few moments later, the aircraft, with its twin steady lights and blinking lights, intersects the ISS's apparent trajectory.
Remember, the ISS is moving probably about 30 times faster than is the plane, but its high orbit makes its 8-second travel distance in this photo seem shorter.
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The ISS sinks toward the southeast, seemingly heading into a bright, waxing half moon ... as another plane appears below and to the right. (For this and the next photo, I had moved the camera and tripod over a bit to reveal the moon that had been occluded behind the house.)
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... And this plane too shall pass, as this celestial dance of Space Station, half moon, and aircraft mark the night sky.
I took all the above images with a Sony DSC-S85 digital camera mounted on a tripod.