Space Weather Tracker
Switch to Day Mode

🌌 About SpaceWeatherTracker

Our Mission • Our Team • Who Creates This

Built by Curiosity, Passion, and a Love for the Sky

Welcome! SpaceWeatherTracker was created by me, Adrienne Bemis. I am a lifelong space enthusiast with a deep curiosity about the universe and the incredible events happening above our planet. For me, space is more than data points and measurements—it is a connection to something much larger than ourselves.

I absolutely love sightseeing, star-gazing, new adventures, traveling to different countries, and a nice aurora glow. From watching a total solar eclipse transform the daytime sky into twilight, to searching for meteor showers, tracking solar activity, and looking for the perfect night to observe the stars, the excitement of space exploration has always been my personal passion. I created SpaceWeatherTracker because I wanted a place where anyone could easily understand, track, and experience the events happening in our beautiful, shared sky.

Adrienne Bemis, founder of SpaceWeatherTracker, with her son

A Passion for Experiencing Space

Some of the most unforgettable moments in astronomy happen when we simply look up. Adrienne enjoys:

  • Watching solar eclipses and lunar eclipses
  • Following major solar activity and space weather events
  • Stargazing and exploring the night sky
  • Tracking meteor showers and celestial events
  • Learning about the Sun, planets, stars, and galaxies
  • Following discoveries and missions happening around the world
  • Sharing the excitement of astronomical events with others

There is something remarkable about knowing that while people across the globe are looking toward the sky, they are all experiencing different parts of the same universe. One person may be watching an aurora appear over the northern horizon, another may be photographing a meteor shower, while someone else may be observing a planet shining brightly before sunrise. Space connects us all.

Bringing Space Closer to Everyone

Many people are fascinated by space but do not always know where to find understandable, reliable information. Scientific websites often provide incredible data, but they can be difficult for beginners to interpret. News articles may highlight major events but often lack the practical information people want most:

"Can I see it from where I live?"

"When should I look?"

"What is actually happening?"

SpaceWeatherTracker was created to help answer those questions. The goal is to combine accurate scientific information with simple explanations and practical tools so that more people can experience the wonder of the universe around them.

A Global View of Our Universe

Space does not belong to one country, one continent, or one group of people. The same Sun shines over every nation. The same Moon travels above every continent. The same stars inspire people across the world. SpaceWeatherTracker celebrates the global nature of astronomy by helping people discover what is happening in the sky above their own location while remembering that these events are part of a much larger cosmic story.

Whether someone is hoping to see the Northern Lights from a backyard, photograph an eclipse, watch a meteor shower from a remote location, or simply understand what is happening on the Sun, the mission remains the same:

Help people look up, stay curious, and feel connected to the universe around them.

The Journey Continues

SpaceWeatherTracker is continuously growing as new space missions launch, scientific discoveries are made, and our understanding of the universe expands. Adrienne's vision is to build a resource where curiosity leads to discovery—a place where anyone can explore current space events, learn the science behind them, and experience the excitement of our changing cosmic environment. Because every day brings something new above us.

Cosmic AI Explorer

Try asking:

Optional: Use Custom Anthropic Key

Stored only in your browser's local storage and sent directly to Anthropic, not through this site's server. Anything in local storage can be read by other scripts running on this page — only paste a key here if you're comfortable with that tradeoff.