STS-128 on Wednesday night from MA

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Here’s my photo of station and shuttle from Massachusetts on Wednesday evening:

Co-Orbital

It was really nice seeing Brendan’s video from the shuttle overflight on Tuesday evening. I watched the pair fly over Boston two orbits earlier, and his video definitely captured the sense of what it was like to see them go past that evening.

The weather forecast for landing tomorrow (Thursday) evening in Florida is looking uncertain. If the shuttle stays up for another day, many people in North America may have another chance to watch the duo flying overhead tomorrow night.

UPDATE BY BRENDAN: A final decision on whether Discovery can land today will come by 5:40 PM EDT. You can follow developments at Spaceflight Now.

If Discovery doesn’t land today, tonight’s double flyovers will be worth checking out, but the pair will be even further apart in the sky than last night — 141 seconds (2:21) at the time of their potential pass over Colorado, as opposed to 73 seconds last night and 13 seconds two nights ago. Here’s a look at where they’d be in the sky over Denver at 8:01:30 PM and 8:03:00 PM MDT, respectively, if the Shuttle is still up there:

080130pm    080300pm

For local details on flyover times (you can see the ISS regardless of whether the Shuttle is there too), go to the Simple Satellite Tracker or Heavens-Above.

[Bumped. -ed. // Original timestamp Sep 10, 2009 @ 4:07.]

FriendFeed: Today is the …

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Today is the climatological peak of the Atlantic hurricane season. It’s roughly average so far compared to long-term totals, but “quite inactive” compared to 1995-2008 active period. Also: today is the 20th anniversary of the date Hurricane Hugo formed. Meanwhile, returning to present day, Hurricane Fred peaked yesterday and is starting to weaken.
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