The Night Sky

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I just went out and waited about 15 minutes and so nothing except these two very strange lights in the sky. They almost look like paratroopers in a parachute, but in white, they are stationary they do not move. I know the pictures don’t do them justice, but that’s what they look like
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Pretty cool picture of Red Sprites in New Zealand...

Red sprites are rarely seen outside a few regions that produce enormous storms, like the Great Plains in the United States or the vast Northeast China Plain. Even where they can be seen with some regularity, seldom do photographers capture them in sharp detail.

They are among a group of weather phenomena known as transient luminous events, electrical discharges in the atmosphere around a thunderstorm that last only a few seconds.

The sprites appear red because they happen above storms in the mesosphere, an atmospheric layer more than 30 miles above Earth’s surface. They turn blue or purple as the electrical discharge descends, much like the changing colors of aurora borealis, according to Gaopeng Lu, an atmospheric physicist at the University of Science and Technology of China.

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IN CASE YOU MISSED TONIGHT: Tomorrow night’s Northern Lights could be even more intense than tonight’s…
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Now that was f'in cool. At first I saw a faint fantail due east, then it became much clearer as it moved to the north. Then the engine pinpoint was clearly visible and the big tail...glad I set an alarm.
Damn, I just missed it
 
Rocket Lab preparing to launch a hypersonic missle for the DOD out of NASA's Wallops Island Launch Facility 25 mile north & east of me.

Now standing at T minus 5 minutes - looking for a decrease in wind


live coverage at the bottom of the page
 
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Damn, I just missed it

There's another one Sunday - not crewed though.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is scheduled to launch the Starlink Group 10-41 mission from Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Sunday, March 1, 2026, at 7:07 PM EST. The rocket will travel northeast, offering potential visibility for the East Coast from Florida up to Maine, with the launch window extending to 11:07 PM EST.
  • Launch Time: Sunday, March 1, 2026, at 7:07 PM EST.
  • Location: Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, FL.
  • Visibility: The rocket will travel northeast along the coast. It may be visible 3–5 minutes after liftoff in FL, GA, SC, NC, VA, MD, DE, NJ, CT, RI, MA, and eastern parts of PA, NY, and ME.
  • Viewing Tips: Look toward the East/Southeast sky shortly after 7:07 PM.
  • Backup: A four-hour window exists until 11:07 PM EST in case of delays.
 

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