Next Viewing Window

No visible Starlink windows found in the next 36 hours.

Best Upcoming Window

Nothing strong is lined up right now.

Viewing Tips

Visible Starlink passes usually happen around twilight. Look in the stated direction a few minutes before the start time and keep scanning upward. Higher elevation passes are easier to spot. A newer launch may show as one chain-leading object here, with the rest of the train following nearby.
Last updated: Mon, Jun 15, 2026 10:31:57 PM CDT
Orbital data: Thu, Jun 11, 2026 7:41:46 AM CDT from 3 source(s) — stale, refresh recommended

Upcoming Viewing Windows

No visible windows were calculated. Try refreshing the cache in a little while.

Launch Watch

Calculation Details

GeneratedMon, Jun 15, 2026 10:31:57 PM CDT
LocationJackson, Missouri (37.3823, -89.6663)
Satellite Sample2 Starlink objects
Newest Element Epoch2026-06-11T15:43:57+00:00
Oldest Element Epoch2026-06-11T15:43:57+00:00
TLE Snapshot UpdatedThu, Jun 11, 2026 7:41:46 AM CDT STALE
TLE Sources3 combined source(s)
Display Rules10°+ above horizon; shows train-like groups or high-elevation single/chain-leader passes
MethodLocal approximate pass prediction using current TLE/SupGP elements, observer geometry, twilight filtering, and sunlit/eclipsed checks.