Watch real-time views of Earth from space, streamed 24/7 through live NASA cameras aboard the International Space Station (ISS). This stream includes live ISS tracking, orbital data, and rotating panels featuring space weather updates and the latest from the Space Station Daily Blog.
The feed may occasionally go dark when the ISS loses satellite connection. It will resume automatically.
The International Space Station (ISS) orbits Earth at an altitude of approximately 420 km (260 miles), traveling at 28,000 km/h (17,500 mph) and completing one orbit every 90 minutes. It is a joint project between five space agencies—NASA (United States), Roscosmos (Russia), ESA (Europe), JAXA (Japan), and CSA (Canada)—and functions as a permanently crewed science laboratory and observation platform in low Earth orbit.
https://www.nasa.gov/international-space-station/
• Primary NASA ISS Camera (Top-Left Panel)
This high-definition camera provides a stunning nadir view (Earth-facing) in 720p resolution. Mounted on the Harmony module, it continuously captures breathtaking visuals of Earth’s surface, including weather systems, oceans, continents, cloud formations, city lights, and the transition between day and night.
• Secondary NASA ISS Camera (Bottom-Right Panel)
This secondary feed offers alternate viewing angles, often showing the curvature of Earth (limb view), docked spacecraft, solar arrays, and various parts of the ISS’s external structure, which adds depth and realism to the live experience.
• ISS Real-Time Tracker (Top-Right Panel)
In the top-right corner, a zoomed-in tracker displays the current position of the ISS as it moves across Earth in real time. This simplified visualization helps viewers follow the live movement of the station over the planet’s surface.
• Orbital Telemetry & Path (Bottom-Left Panel)
In the bottom-left panel, you’ll see real-time telemetry provided by the European Space Agency (ESA), displaying the ISS’s current latitude, longitude, altitude, and orbital speed.
The arc shows the ISS’s ground track, illustrating its position 90 minutes ago and 90 minutes ahead. Due to its orbit and Earth’s rotation, the station shifts about 2,200 km (1,367 mi) westward per orbit while appearing to travel west to east.
• Space Info Panel (Center-Bottom)
The center-bottom rotating panel alternates automatically between two content sources:
1. Latest updates from the NASA Space Station Blog, featuring mission news, astronaut activities, spacewalks, science experiments, and educational content from aboard the ISS.
https://www.nasa.gov/blogs/spacestation/
2. Aurora forecast maps for both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres are provided by NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center. These color-coded maps (ranging from green to red) represent the probability and intensity of visible auroras expected in the next 60 minutes, based on real-time solar and geomagnetic activity.
https://www.swpc.noaa.gov/
🎵 Music & General Info
This live stream features relaxing ambient and meditation music licensed for commercial use via Pond5.
Tracks used:
- Atmospheric Cinematic Piano
- Relaxing Meditation & Yoga Background
- Deep Meditation Theta Binaural Waves
All visuals are from publicly available NASA live feeds and real-time orbital data.
This stream is not affiliated with or endorsed by NASA, ESA, or NOAA.
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