ISS (DESTINY) is an active satellite operated by United States, launched on 2001-02-07 from Cape Canaveral, Florida. With over 25 years in orbit, it has far exceeded many satellites’ design lifetimes. It orbits in Low Earth Orbit (LEO). Orbital Radar tracks ISS (DESTINY) in real time using the latest two-line element set (TLE) data, providing live position, altitude, speed and orbital path updated continuously.
🌍 Orbit Context
ISS (DESTINY) operates in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), the most accessible and heavily used orbital regime. LEO spans roughly 160 to 2,000 km altitude and contains over 80% of all active satellites. Objects in LEO circle the Earth every 90–120 minutes at speeds exceeding 27,000 km/h, and their relatively low altitude enables high-resolution imaging, low-latency communications and crewed spaceflight.
ISS (DESTINY) is operated by United States. It is catalogued by the U.S. Space Surveillance Network under NORAD ID 26700. You can track ISS (DESTINY) in real time on Orbital Radar’s live tracker.
ISS (DESTINY) was launched on 2001-02-07 from Cape Canaveral, Florida, one of the busiest launch facilities in the world, operated by NASA and the U.S. Space Force on Florida’s Atlantic coast.
Yes — Orbital Radar tracks ISS (DESTINY) (NORAD ID 26700) using the latest TLE (two-line element set) data from Space-Track and CelesTrak. Open the live tracker to see its current position, altitude, speed and orbital path updated in real time.