Look. . . up in the sky. . . It's the International Space Station
When I was a youngster growing up in the Throggs Neck section of The Bronx, the Hayden Planetarium had a service called Dial-a-Satellite.
When you called a special phone number, you could hear a recorded message telling you when and where to look for the brightest naked-eye satellites that occasionally tracked across our local New York skies. Back then (and I'm speaking now about the mid-1960s) the only really bright satellites readily visible were actually two giant Mylar balloons... measuring about 100-feet in diameter which orbited Earth at altitudes of about 1000 miles.

The 135-foot rigidized inflatable balloon Echo I satellite undergoing tensile stress test in a dirigible hanger at Weekesville, North Carolina in the early 1960s.
These were the Echo
passive communications satellites: they actually functioned as reflectors, not transmitters. After being placed in orbit around the Earth, a signal would be relayed to one of the two Echo satellites, which were reflected or bounced off its surface, then returned to Earth. The Echo satellites were easily visible to the eye because of their highly reflective surface, but also because of their low orbits; they would appear from below one side of the horizon, cross the sky, then disappear below the opposite horizon after crossing the sky, as happens with all low Earth orbiting satellites. These spacecraft were nicknamed satelloons
by those involved in the project. Today, those two Echo satellites are long-gone, but there are now literally thousands of satellites orbiting our Earth.
By far and away, the biggest object now orbiting our Earth is the International Space Station. And if our skies are reasonably clear on Saturday, November 22, we here in the Tri-State Area will have a great opportunity to see the ISS make a long, high pass across the evening twilight sky.
It will be moving along a track that will take it roughly from Washington to just north of New York and then on toward Boston and the Gulf of Maine; it will briefly overfly our region about an hour after sundown.
It always amazes people when they are told that they can actually see the Space Station—now orbiting 218 miles above Earth—with their own two eyes; no optical aid is needed. As big as a football field, the ISS is visible by virtue of sunlight shining on its metallic skin and large solar panels. To the unaided eye it appears as a very bright star that does not twinkle and shines with a slight yellowish-white tinge. Check out this short video of it when it passed over Gloucester, Massachusetts back on Christmas Eve, 2006.
What to expect when looking for the International Space Station in the night sky.
Some assiduous astronomers have even been able to photograph the actual structure of the Space Station by tracking it with their telescope:

A composite of images of the International Space Station from a ground-based telescope. © Dirk Ewers, 2008
On Saturday, the ISS will emerge from above the southwest horizon at 5:32 p.m. Prepare yourself for this ISS pass by getting outside some minutes before it's due to appear and getting yourself acclimated to the sky and the surrounding stars. Certainly, you will immediately notice two very bright, non-twinkling silvery stars
low in the southwest. They are not stars, but planets; the brighter and lower of the two is Venus, the other will be Jupiter. Make a fist and hold it out at arm's length. When the ISS first appears, it should be roughly "two fists" to the right of Jupiter and Venus. It will appear to move straight up to a point almost directly overhead. It will then drop down toward the northeast, disappearing about 3-minutes after it first appeared, near to the northeast horizon. It actually will seem to rapidly fade out toward the end of its track as it moves into the Earth's shadow.

Path of the International Space Station on November 22, 2008 between 5:32 and 5:35 p.m. Image © Heavens-Above GmbH.
As to just how bright it should get, it should be plainly visible even from brightly lit cities; only Venus and perhaps Jupiter will be brighter. So during it's 3-minutes of visibility, the Space Station will be one of the three brightest objects in the sky!
And keep in mind that as you look at it, there are ten people who are currently onboard. Three are semi-permanent residents, staying for upwards of six months on the ISS. The other seven just recently arrived on the Space Shuttle Endeavour which was launched from Florida on November 14. The Shuttle is currently docked to the ISS and is scheduled to return to Earth on November 29.
Pretty neat, huh? Tell all your neighbors... and take the kids out for a look.
I'll be interested to see how many plan to check it out, so drop me a line if you see it.
- Joe Rao's blog
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I tried to see it tonight at
I´s a great experience to can
I´s a great experience to can see ISS crossing the night sky of Montevideo.It is indescribable.I like it very much.
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Submited by : Caballos
View From the Westside
The view from Hudson River Park was spectacular. I've seen visible passes before, but this was as bright or brighter than any I'd previously witnessed. The ISS tracked exactly as you said it would. Although, I could not make out any detail, even with binoculars, it is my understanding that two of the astronauts were actually conducting a spacewalk at the time of the pass.
first time viewer!
We stood in Chinatown, NYC at the corner of St. James and Oliver. We found the two planets (thanks for the tip). We then waited patiently for a couple of minutes looking "right". The ISS came from behind the Verizon building, moving faster than expected, it did go right above us (directly up)and we stood looking up into the evening sky as the ISS moved along steadily. It disappeared from our view moving northeasterly. It moved from our viewpoint behind more buildings. Really wonderful. Thank you.
ISS from buenos aires
Manhattan satellite views
Thanks for letting us know about your successful observations from Chinatown. Many find it hard to believe we can actually see the Shuttle and International Space Station (let alone Venus and Jupiter) from Manhattan. My students will be encouraged to read your report and seek the spacecraft next time they make a dramatic visit to local skies.
I'm also going to email the link to Joe's Blog and other Hayden sites to friends with interests in things celestial. They'll be encouraged to then forward the links to their own friends. Perhaps we can thereby get a space interest pyramid going, sharing our pleasure in overhead events!
Best wishes for clear skies, Steve Beyer
Reporting in from Fort Greene, BK
We had an uninterrupted view of the ISS from the vantage point of Fort Greene Park. Having not seen something like this before, was surprised at how fast it moved across the sky. Hard to make out their faces on board, but worth bundling up and trekking out into the cold for! ;-)
Thanks for the heads up.
Fort Greene Park vistas
Good going! I hope others in your neighborhood will be inspired by your report to enjoy sky vistas from Fort Greene Park. As you know, it's just across the street from Brooklyn Tech. Among the students who looked out from that school's windows at the park were Irwin Shapiro, later to be Director of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and Arno Penzias, who worked on the Echo satellite project, and a Nobel Laureate in physics for his co-discovery of the cosmic background microwave radiation, conclusive evidence of the Big Bang.
On my first day at Tech my English teacher, Mr. Balsam, rather than just asking what we did over Summer vacation said, "Who has ever seen moon's of Jupiter throught a telescope!". I answered YES and went on to receive a nice grade in the class.
Steve Beyer
Seeing the Shuttle and Space Station
Take Joe's advice and follow his excellent instructions, then if skies are clear over the Tri-State area Saturday evening, you'll enjoy a wonderful show as both Shuttle and International Space Station pass nearly overhead!
We had a preview last evening, Thursday November 20th, when these spacecraft moved halfway across the sky before vanishing in Earth's shadow. At their peak, the pair were at least as bright as Venus. We anticipate similar brilliance around the midpoint of their traverse Saturday evening.
Another opportunity for a spacecraft encounter will take place Monday the 24th, albeit shortly after sunset, when twilight is bright and the craft will be more difficult to spot in contrast with a pale blue sky. Nevertheless, by 4:51 p.m., when Shuttle and Space Station at at their peak elevation above the horizon, high in the northwestern sky, they should be plainly visible. Begin Monday evening by facing southwest at 4:48 p.m. During the next three minutes scan back and forth towards the zenith until you locate the spacecraft moving toward the apex of their passage. By 4:54 they are expected to disappear low in the northeast, as they enter Earth's shadow.
Two big differences between ground based views of spacecraft and high flying aircraft are the following. First, no blinking navigational lights are visible - when we see satellites we see the reflected dazzle of sunlight, a significant cascade of light even when viewed from the distance of hundreds of miles. The second distinctive aspect of spacecraft is their rather startling increase in brightness as they approach the zenith. Airplanes usually don't show such dramatic changes.
Joe's memories of the Echo I communication satellite brought back my own recollections of it and other artificial satellites seen over the city during early years of the space age. In early October 1957, I was a freshman at Brooklyn Technical High School and for several evenings I guided family and friends to the roof of our apartment building, Flagg Court in Bay Ridge, to watch Sptunik I. That roof was a favorite site where I often brought my 3.5 inch "Skyscope" reflecting telescope to view Moon, planets and stars.
Few who saw Sputnik those nights had any perception of the scale of what they were seeing. That first artificial satellite was hardly bigger than a basketball and was hundred of miles from us. One well meaning neighbor who owned a local printing shop offered to bring flood lamps to better illuminate the satellite and facilite our sightings. I thanked him for his kind suggestion and instead offered a view through my binoculars.
If possible, record the times and circumstances of your spacecraft sightings. Then let Joe (and the rest of us) know what you experienced.
Best wishes for clear skies, Steve Beyer