NOAA-20 over Atlanta tonight
Pass predictions for Atlanta, GA.
Next visible pass
Wed, Jun 10, 1:35 PM
Peak elevation 22.26° · rises SE · sets N
Tracking: NOAA 20 (JPSS-1) (NORAD 43013)
7-day pass forecast
| Date | Time | Peak elev | Rises | Sets |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 10 | 1:35 PM | 22.26° | SE | N |
| Jun 10 | 3:14 PM | 39.19° | S | NW |
| Jun 11 | 1:59 AM | 11.35° | E | E |
| Jun 11 | 3:35 AM | 69.88° | N | S |
| Jun 11 | 1:17 PM | 14.87° | E | NE |
| Jun 11 | 2:55 PM | 60.48° | S | N |
| Jun 12 | 3:17 AM | 76.63° | N | S |
How to spot NOAA-20 from Atlanta
NOAA polar weather satellite (JPSS).
- Look in the direction listed — passes start near the horizon and arc across the sky.
- Peak elevation matters — a 60°+ peak means it'll go nearly overhead; under 30° stays low.
- Best viewing is in the 90 minutes after sunset or before sunrise — the satellite is sunlit while you're in shadow.
- No equipment needed for bright passes — the ISS at peak rivals Venus.
Going to look up?
For fainter satellites you'll want 7×50 or 10×50 binoculars. A pair of Celestron SkyMaster binoculars is the consensus pick. Affiliate placement — replace with your affiliate link.
Pass alerts on your phone
Browser push, no email needed. We'll notify you 30 minutes before NOAA-20 is visible from Atlanta.
Prefer email?
One email tonight before NOAA-20 is visible, never more than 2/week.