by eaglekepr » Sat Apr 06, 2019 3:49 pm
Re: the last question, yes. The ISS makes one rotation per orbit so the cupola is always aimed at the Earth except for specific reasons when they temporarily change the orientation.
There's a number of us amateur astro imagers on Twitter that manually track ISS passes with telescopes then post images or sequences from the pass. This last week as pretty good for viewing from the UK and Western Europe with high altitude passes just after dusk. Here's a couple of mine from last weekend:
https://twitter.com/Eaglekepr/status/11 ... 4819196940
https://twitter.com/Eaglekepr/status/11 ... 1875963911
Those sequences were from around 250 DSLR frames, processed with software to crop and align on the ISS, rejecting any "misses" and frames where it blurred too much, then put into an animation. Total used frames was about 150 from the pass.
Re: the last question, yes. The ISS makes one rotation per orbit so the cupola is always aimed at the Earth except for specific reasons when they temporarily change the orientation.
There's a number of us amateur astro imagers on Twitter that manually track ISS passes with telescopes then post images or sequences from the pass. This last week as pretty good for viewing from the UK and Western Europe with high altitude passes just after dusk. Here's a couple of mine from last weekend:
https://twitter.com/Eaglekepr/status/1111751254819196940
https://twitter.com/Eaglekepr/status/1112446641875963911
Those sequences were from around 250 DSLR frames, processed with software to crop and align on the ISS, rejecting any "misses" and frames where it blurred too much, then put into an animation. Total used frames was about 150 from the pass.