Satellite Passes Tonight — El Paso, TX

Live satellite pass predictions for El Paso, Texas. Updated in real time.

Tonight's Visible Passes

THOR AGENA D R/B 7:55 PM
Max elevation 19°
Direction SSW → NNW
Duration 13 min
CSS (TIANHE) 8:10 PM
Max elevation
Direction W → S
Duration 7 min
THOR AGENA D R/B 6:32 AM
Max elevation 19°
Direction NNE → SSE
Duration 13 min
HST 7:00 AM
Max elevation 21°
Direction W → SE
Duration 11 min

Predictions computed at 5:45 PM. Times shown in local time.

Full Pass Predictions

Interactive predictions with weather, viewing conditions, and more satellites.

Tonight

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Satellite Watching in El Paso

Best Viewing Season

Year-round, best in spring and fall

Weather Conditions

The driest region in the US with exceptional clarity. Summer monsoon season (July–September) brings afternoon thunderstorms in Arizona and New Mexico but evenings often clear. Winter is excellent.

Light Pollution

El Paso has a Bortle class of 7 (suburban skies — ISS and bright satellites visible). The Southwest region averages about 175 clear nights per year.

Launch Visibility

Not visible from the Southwest, though rare high-altitude rocket stages have been spotted from West Texas.

Southern Arizona and New Mexico can occasionally spot the exhaust plume of powerful Vandenberg launches during twilight conditions.

Viewing Tips for El Paso

The Southwest is a satellite watcher's paradise. Low humidity, minimal clouds, and vast dark sky areas. Big Bend (TX), Chaco Canyon (NM), and the Sonoran Desert (AZ) offer Bortle 1-2 skies.

Best Time to Watch

Check for passes during the first 2 hours after sunset or before sunrise. This is when satellites catch sunlight against a dark sky.

What to Look For

Satellites look like steady, bright stars moving smoothly across the sky. They don't blink like airplanes.

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