You can never see the I.S.S. from Earth, only in space.
Yes, some are visible. The Space Station is one of them.
there are many ways. First of, everynight at 12:34 am. You can see it west in the sky
the first space station built was the sky lab in 1973.
The sky-lab did the same thing a space station would do
If you look up at the right time, you can see the International Space Station arc across the sky.
yes there is
it has a low orbit of 340 KM in the sky
On the 14th of May, 1973.
You see the International space station at night because it reflects sunlight back to earth.
About 220 miles plus or minus a little.
If you mean which direction do I look to see the Space Station the answer is it depends. The Space Station is orbiting at 17,500 miles per hour so it's not going to appear stationary. You cannot see the Space Station during the daytime because the sky is too bright, and you cannot see it in the middle of the night because it's too close to the Earth to catch any reflected light from the sun. Which leaves right before sunrise and right after sunset as the only viewing opportunities and of course it has to be in your area. NASA has a website where you can findout what's visible from your location and when
nothing