When and where to watch, check exact timings

The International Space Station, which carries the Indian astronaut Shubhanshu Shukla, will fly several times over India in the next few days. The ongoing Aksiyom-4 space station, which is part of the space mission, will move towards the sky like a bright star. It will offer a unique opportunity to see it with the naked eye. Skywatchers can witness this rare celestial event that reflects the wonder of human success until July 12th.
When will ISS be seen in India?
According to NASA’s station application, ISS was first seen in India on 8 July 2025 at 4:00 in India. Next, the night can be seen later at 19:59 and 21:38. It will be seen on July 9 at 4:10 in the morning and then at 20:14. It can be detected on July 10 at 15: 22, 16:58 and 21:25. The space station will be seen on July 12 at 2:34 and 04:09, 11 July and 12:00. If you miss the first dates, ISS will be seen again between July 24th and August 1st.
How is ISS seen in India?
The station or ISS detector applications available for ISS, Android and iOS can be detected from India through NASA’s spot. Download these applications to help you monitor the position of ISS and set reminders for approaching landscapes. As mentioned above, it can be seen with the naked eye at certain times and no telescope will be required, just a clear appearance of the horizon.
Shubhanshu Shukla says, ‘It is a privilege to watch the world from ISS’.
Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla is currently a 14-day area of ISS as a part of the Isro-Nasa Joint Project. The space station flies at a speed of 28,000 km / h from the earth and completes an orbit in just 90 minutes. “It is a few privileges that have the chance to see the world from a point of view that I can now see. It was a great journey.” The attention, the Axiom area, emphasized the importance of the AX-4 mission. Axiearth, which leads to Axiearth.
Shukla is the second Indian to go to space after Raqesh Sharma, who started from the Kennedy Space Center in NASA’s Falcon 9 rocket on NASA’s Falcon 9 rocket. As Axiom Mission 4’s task pilot, he helped the pilot of the Dragon spacecraft, which was autonomously placed with ISS at 16: 05 (IST). The Shukla and the AX-4 crew was taken by the seven-member ExPedition 73 team in ISS and started their duties with a security briefing. The AX-4 crew consists of former NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson, Isro’s group captain Shubhanshu Shukla, ESA Astronaut Slawosz Uznanski-Wisniewski and Tibor Kapu from Hungary.
(With inputs from agencies)



