SpaceX Crew-1: Earth From Space seen from Crew Dragon Arrival at Space Station

SpaceX Crew-1 mission with NASA astronauts launched to Space Station as part of Commercial Crew Program. Liftoff of Falcon 9 crewed mission from LC-39A, Kennedy Space Center, Florida occurred on Sunday, November 15 at 7:27 p.m. EST (00:27 UTC, Nov. 15). Resilience Crew Dragon is now docked to ISS with NASA astronauts Michael Hopkins, Victor Glover, and Shannon Walker along with JAXA astronaut Soichi Noguchi, all members of the Expedition 64 crew.

LIVE: HD Views of Earth from Space Station

Watch our mix view of Earth from multiple cameras from the International Space Station as well as a map showing where the Space Station is at this exact moment. The cameras may be black if the Station is in Earth’s shadow, or blue/red if the Station is out of range with satellites to send the signal back to Earth. The Space Station orbits Earth every 90 minutes and has up to 6 astronauts onboard conducting research and science experiments.

NASA Live: Official Stream of NASA TV

Direct from America’s space program to YouTube, watch NASA TV live streaming here to get the latest from our exploration of the universe and learn how we discover our home planet.

NASA TV airs a variety of regularly scheduled, pre-recorded educational and public relations programming 24 hours a day on its various channels. The network also provides an array of live programming, such as coverage of missions, events (spacewalks, media interviews, educational broadcasts), press conferences and rocket launches.

In the United States, NASA Television’s Public and Media channels are MPEG-2 digital C-band signals carried by QPSK/DVB-S modulation on satellite AMC-3, transponder 15C, at 87 degrees west longitude. Downlink frequency is 4000 MHz, horizontal polarization, with a data rate of 38.86 Mhz, symbol rate of 28.1115 Ms/s, and ¾ FEC. A Digital Video Broadcast (DVB) compliant Integrated Receiver Decoder (IRD) is needed for reception.

NASA Live: Official Stream of NASA TV’s Media Channel

Direct from America’s space program to YouTube, watch NASA TV live streaming here to get the latest from our exploration of the universe and learn how we discover our home planet.

NASA TV airs a variety of regularly scheduled, pre-recorded educational and public relations programming 24 hours a day on its various channels. The network also provides an array of live programming, such as 24-hour coverage of missions, events (spacewalks, media interviews, educational broadcasts), press conferences and rocket launches.

In the United States, NASA Television’s Public and Media channels are MPEG-2 digital C-band signals carried by QPSK/DVB-S modulation on satellite AMC-3, transponder 15C, at 87 degrees west longitude. Downlink frequency is 4000 MHz, horizontal polarization, with a data rate of 38.86 Mhz, symbol rate of 28.1115 Ms/s, and ¾ FEC. A Digital Video Broadcast (DVB) compliant Integrated Receiver Decoder (IRD) is needed for reception.