"You put in your GPS location, wherever you are on the globe it will format exactly where to look in the sky, which direction and exactly which moment."
Easy access to astronomical information with modern technology made it easier for amateur astronomers, he said.
"If you're doing any public astronomy, you always look out for when the space station might be going over at that time."
The space station is a habitable artificial satellite in low Earth orbit - its ownership and use established by intergovernmental treaties and agreements.
For more information go to: spotthestation.Nasa.gov
Astronomers will also be looking skyward today for a solar eclipse. Stonehenge Aotearoa, near Carterton, is offering a viewing today, with special telescopes and glasses to allow the eclipse to be viewed safely. About 70 per cent of the eclipse totality will be visible between 9.15am and 11.45am.
APNZ