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Credit: Anthony Ayiomamitis    
    
    
Explanation:
That large sunspot    
near the right edge of the Sun is actually not a sunspot at all.    
    
It's the    
International Space Station    
(ISS) docked with the Space    
Shuttle Discovery on mission    
STS-114.    
    
In the past, many    
skygazers    
have spotted the space station and space shuttles as bright    
stars gliding through    
twilight skies, still    
glinting in the    
sunlight while orbiting 200 kilometers or so above the    
Earth's surface.    
    
But here, astronomer Anthony Ayiomamitis took advantage of    
a rarer opportunity to    
record    
the spacefaring combination moving quickly    
in silhouette across the solar disk on Thursday, July 28th from    
Athens, Greece.    
    
Launched    
on Tuesday, Discovery joined with the ISS Thursday,    
causing the already large space station seem to    
loom    
even larger.    
    
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NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and Disclaimers
NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: international space station - space shuttle
Publications with words: international space station - space shuttle
See also:

