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For those of you who are interested in ISS passes over your local area, you may want to check out this particular website www.heavens-above.com. I pulled up the ISS link over on YouTube for those of you who are checking in over there. I'm looking at the visible part of the Denver area. This also has a button where you can check and look at all the passes coming up, visible and not visible passes. Right now I'm interested in the visible passes over the ISS area. We'll take a look at that. I looked at this particular website. I can click on a particular date and get a nice star chart. Right now all the ISS passes over the Denver area are in the morning hours. The highest one that I'm seeing on the list is coming up on the 21st, this Thursday morning at 4.40 a.m. The ISS travels from the west-southwest to the northeast peaking about 81 degrees of the northwest horizon. It actually starts pretty high. I'm going to go back to the ISS. I'm going to go back to the ISS. I'm going to go back to the ISS. Right now I've posted that particular star chart over on YouTube so you can see where that ISS starts. It starts in the constellation of Pegasus, passes between Perseus and Cassiopeia through Campbell Apartilis, goes through the links and then disappears. If you know what Pegasus looks like, you can catch Pegasus at 4.41 for sure. It should be dark enough. You can watch that ISS pass from the west-southwest to the northeast there and follow along. Again, that website is www.heavens-above.com.

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