Starlink launch 2026-145
In train formation
Tracked in the catalog with 24 satellites. The batch is still in a spreading chain at about 351 km: from the ground, the satellites pass one after another rather than as a single tight line.
Data updated: July 13, 2026, 15:10 UTC · source data refreshed every 2 hours from CelesTrak
Can you see this train from your location?
--:-- pick your city and the next passes are computed in your browser.
Watch it move
How to spot it
- A line of steady, non-blinking lights; blinking means aircraft.
- Look during the hour or two after sunset or before sunrise.
- A pass takes a few minutes; the chain follows the lead satellite.
- Assuming clear skies; city glow matters less than clouds.
Launch record
Starlink launch 2026-145: 24 satellites when first cataloged; 24 still in the active catalog at about 351 km.
Dates are catalog appearance dates, not launch dates: new batches typically enter the public tracking catalog one to several days after liftoff. Counts and altitudes are computed from CelesTrak orbital data at build time.
For news sites and blogs
Embed the live view of this train, free with credit ("azmth.space · orbital data: CelesTrak"):
<iframe src="https://azmth.space/embed?train=2026-145" width="100%" height="480" style="border:0;border-radius:12px" loading="lazy" title="Starlink train 2026-145 live: azmth"></iframe>
https://azmth.space/starlink/launches/2026-145
Common questions
Can I see the Starlink train from launch 2026-145 tonight?
That depends on your location. Use the pass checker on this page: enter your city and the next 48 hours of passes are computed in your browser, including whether each pass is sunlit and likely visible or hidden in daylight or Earth’s shadow.
What does a Starlink train look like?
A line of steady, non-blinking lights crossing the sky over a few minutes, at dawn or dusk. Blinking lights are aircraft. The train effect fades as the satellites climb and spread out over days to weeks.
How many satellites are in this train?
24 satellites from this launch are currently tracked, in a chain at about 351 km altitude.
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