I’ll be flying to Orlando tomorrow on business, and if the Space Shuttle Discovery is launched as scheduled on Thursday at 9:35 p.m., will I be able to see it from Orlando?
Also, should I bring a pair of binoculars?
BTW, I’ll be sure to ask at the front desk for an east-facing room, so I don’t have to climb to the roof of the hotel.
I’ve seen shuttle launches from Fort Myers. That’s on the gulf coast hours south of Orlando. Night launches are even easier to see. Binoculars make it even better.
Just to chime in–I lived in Orlando for nearly a year back in the early '90s and saw several daytime launches and at least one nighttime launch from various parts of the city. It’s quite clearly visible day or night.
I’m bummed that I never got a chance to see it close up while I was there, though.
The only time I watched a nighttime launch I could clearly see the Shuttle in detail (well, at least the entire silhouette enough to know it was the Shuttle)
Nighttime launches are very visible, even from as far as TAMPA. Even Daytime launches are visible from Tampa if the sky is clear. I watched the Challenger explode from the PE field of my elementary school. It was very clear that day and the fireball and smoke was very defined even from that far away.
We are here just SW of Daytona and waiting to see if the countdown continues. Hate to do the 40 minute drive for a scrub. Saying only 40% chance for launch tonight. If it is still a go at 8:45 or so we’ll be down the road for a front row seat.
According to the NY Times who quotes a NASA PR person, the night launch will be visible from New York city assuming clear weather. Orlando won’t be a problem.
Has anyone found a site that would show where and when to look to see the shuttle pass by, immediately after launch, from locations along the east coast? I looked around and couldn’t find anything.
I’m in the Balto-Wash area, and I’m guessing that I should be able to see it moving from the southeast to the northeast about ten minutes after launch. Obviously, I wasn’t able to test my theory tonight, but I’d like to have more concrete info.
NASA has a Java applet for satellite tracking, but it doesn’t seem to provide what I was looking for. Maybe that’s because the launch was scrubbed.
But there must be something that would tell me where and when to look. Note that I’m not looking to track it after it reaches orbit, but right after launch.
Never mind. I found it. Looks like I was roughly right about the timing, although I had forgotten that MECO (Main Engine Cut-Off) is at T+ 8 minutes, after which you probably won’t see it.
The real thing I was off about is that I should have been looking south-southwest, not southeast. Also, the maximum altitude it reaches (for me) is about 7 degrees above the horizon, which means I won’t have much chance of seeing it, what with low lying haze, light pollution, etc.
Oh, well. When they reschedule, I may try to find a good viewing location and give it a shot.