Can You See Starlink Tonight in El Palomar?
Live visible Starlink pass times for El Palomar, Buenos Aires, Argentina (-34.62°, -58.60°). Below you'll find when to look up, which direction to face — generally toward the north as the satellites climb — and how high each pass gets. Times are shown in your local zone (El Palomar runs on roughly UTC-4), computed from real orbital data.
Calculating tonight's visible passes over El Palomar…
Propagating the whole Starlink constellation in your browser
Seeing Starlink satellites from El Palomar
SpaceX's Starlink satellites orbit about 550 km up and are bright enough to see without a telescope when the geometry is right. El Palomar sits at a fairly low latitude (34.6° S), well inside Starlink's 53°-inclined orbital shells, so satellites can climb high overhead and cross the sky in almost any direction. Passes here are often steep and bright when the geometry lines up.
Skies over El Palomar are darker than a big metro, so even fainter Starlink passes have a good chance of being visible once your eyes adjust. The best chances come during the dark hours around dawn and dusk, when a satellite high above El Palomar is still catching sunlight while the sky around you has already gone dark.
Freshly launched Starlink batches travel close together and appear as a striking "train" of lights moving in a line; as they spread into their operational orbits over the following weeks they become individual moving points. The pass table above already filters for genuinely visible passes over El Palomar — sunlit satellite, dark sky, at least 10° above your horizon.
Frequently asked questions
- Can I see Starlink tonight in El Palomar?
- Often, yes. When a Starlink satellite passes over El Palomar while it's still lit by the Sun and your sky is dark — around dawn and dusk — it shows up as a steady moving point of light, no telescope needed. The table on this page lists tonight's visible passes for El Palomar with the exact time and direction to look.
- What time is best to see Starlink over El Palomar?
- Roughly 1–2 hours after sunset or before sunrise, during twilight, when satellites overhead are sunlit but the ground is dark. Each pass on this page shows its start time in your local zone (El Palomar is around UTC-4).
- Which direction should I look from El Palomar?
- Each pass lists where the satellite rises, its highest point and where it sets. Because El Palomar is in the southern hemisphere, many passes track across the northern sky, so facing north is a good default — then follow the moving light as it climbs.
- Why can't I always see Starlink from El Palomar?
- Starlink satellites are only visible when sunlight reflects off them while you're in darkness. In the middle of the night they pass through Earth's shadow and vanish, and by day the sky is too bright — which is why visible passes over El Palomar cluster around dawn and dusk.
Starlink passes over other cities
Looking for live coverage instead? See Starlink satellites currently overhead El Palomar.
