On Sun, June 1, 2014 18:58, Wiggins Patrick wrote:
Tonight: Appears 22h59m19s -0.3mag az:228.7° SW horizon Culmination 23h04m41s -4.3mag az:141.7° SE h:76.8° distance: 425.1km height above Earth: 415.8km elevation of Sun: -19° Disappears 23h10m06s -0.1mag az: 54.9° NE horizon
My sons and I caught this one tonight. We were stationed out in Fairfield under beautiful skies. We had a clear view of it from where we spotted it near Hercules through to the northern Horizon. It was the first sighting of the ISS for my two young astronomers. I may have been more excited than they were. My 9yo son was far more thrilled that he found the Leo Triplet, M13, and M5 on his own tonight without any help. He has a little 6" Dob. It fits him like a glove: http://photos.utahsimpkins.com/photos/i-cVk4H4S/0/L/i-cVk4H4S-L.jpg After the ISS passed we sat and picked out a few constellations (we are still learning). After a while he said: "Dad, people who don't like astronomy aren't for me. I like astronomers." Nine years old and he has it all figured out. :) -Ryan