Astronomy

Sun, moon and celestial observations for Manila.

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Sun

They

Sunrise
Sunrise
Sunset
Sunset
Daylight
Change
Elevation
Azimuth
Moon phase

Moon

Moonrise
Moonrise
Moonset
Moon set
Illumination
Age
Distance
Elevation

Moon phases

New moon
New moon
First quarter
First quarter
Full moon
Full moon
Last quarter
Last quarter

Dawn / Kp Index

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A-index (estimated)
Geomagnetic storm

Data: NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center

🛸 ISS (International Space Station) 🇨🇳 Tiangong (Chinese Space Station)

Click for map NASA → CNSA →
Current position
°, °
°, °
Not available
Distance
Next pass
Astronauts in space
Right now

Altitude
Speed

🛸 ISS Live Tracking 🇨🇳 Tiangong Live Tracking

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Twilight times

Astronomical dawn
sun -18° below horizon
Nautical dawn
sun -12° below horizon
Civil dawn
sun -6° below horizon
Sunrise
sun above horizon
Sunset
sun below horizon
Civil twilight
than
Nautical twilight
than
Astronomical twilight
total darkness

Meteor showers

No active meteor showers at the moment

Tip: Meteor showers are best seen on clear, moonless nights far away from light pollution.

📅 Upcoming astronomical events

About solar, lunar and space weather

Sunrise and sunset times depend on your latitude, longitude and date. They are computed from the Sun's position; civil, nautical and astronomical twilight are defined by the Sun's elevation below the horizon (e.g. −6°, −12°, −18°). The Moon's phases follow the synodic month (new to full and back); illumination and rise/set times are used by astronomers and the public (NASA; USNO).

The Kp index measures global geomagnetic activity on a 0–9 scale and is used to estimate aurora visibility at mid-latitudes. Higher Kp (e.g. 5–7) can bring aurora to lower latitudes; values come from ground-based magnetometers. Geomagnetic storms are driven by the solar wind and coronal mass ejections; NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center and similar services provide forecasts (NOAA SWPC; WMO).

Space weather affects satellites, communications and power grids. The solar cycle (about 11 years) influences the frequency of flares and CMEs. Human spaceflight (e.g. ISS) and space station passes are predictable from orbital mechanics; data on this page may use APIs from NASA, NOAA or other space agencies. Meteor showers occur when Earth crosses comet debris; peak rates and dates are published by the IMO and NASA.

Sources: NASA (Sun/Moon data; eclipse and space science); USNO (astronomical data); NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center; WMO; IMO (meteor showers).