
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it's the Hubble Space Telescope transiting the sun at around 17,000 mph (27,000 kph).
Astrophotographer Efrain Morales captured the dramatic footage on Dec. 15, 2025, from the city of Aguadilla in Puerto Rico. In the video, the Hubble Space Telescope appears as a tiny, defined silhouette gliding past the sunspot known as AR4308.
The entire event lasted just 1.01 seconds, leaving Morales no margin for error.
The Hubble Space Telescope orbits at an altitude of about 340 miles (547 kilometers), completing one circuit of Earth every 95 minutes. Catching it against the sun requires not only perfect timing but also precise positioning on the ground.
Transit predictions showed that the alignment was visible within a 4.68-mile-wide (7.54 km) corridor on Earth, meaning that anyone wishing to catch the transit would have to be located at exactly the right place. Even then, the telescope took just 1.01 seconds to traverse the sun from Morales' vantage point — a fleeting encounter that could easily be missed without careful planning and high-speed imaging.
To capture this incredible footage, Morales relied on transit-prediction software to calculate the telescope's exact path across the sun, then paired that timing with a high-frame-rate imaging setup. He recorded the footage using a Lunt LS50THa solar scope, mounted on a CGX-L, alongside an ASI CMOS camera and Cemax 2x Barlows — equipment specifically designed for safe, detailed solar observations where every frame counts. (Reminder: Never observe or photograph the sun without such specialized safety gear.)
Unlike the International Space Station, which frequently steals the spotlight during solar transits thanks to its size, Hubble presents a far greater challenge. Measuring about 43 feet (13 meters) long, the iconic space telescope is roughly 10 times smaller than the ISS, making it much harder to resolve against the sun's brilliant surface.
Editor's note: If you snap an astrophoto and would like to share it with Space.com's readers, send your photo(s), comments, and your name and location to [email protected].
latest_posts
- 1
Report in relation to renaming Herzog Park set to be withdrawn - 2
Nuno Loureiro, MIT physicist, fatally shot at home; police investigate - 3
Find the Native Culinary Customs: Local Flavors - 4
Spotify Wrapped and Apple Music Replay are here: Top songs, albums and artists of 2025 - 5
Tech Patterns 2023: 12 Advancements to Keep an eye Out For
Select Your Definitive Pizza Decision
Figure out How to Use the Experience of a Fender bender Legal counselor for Your Potential benefit
The 20 Most sultry Style of the Time
As reefs vanish, assisted coral fertilization offers hope in the Dominican Republic
The Most Well known Online Entertainment Forces to be reckoned with of 2023
Satellite data reveals a huge solar storm in 2024 shrank Earth's protective plasma shield
6 Shades Brands For Seniors
How federal officials talk about health is shifting in troubling ways – and that change makes me worried for my autistic child
6 Natural products High In Vitamins,Which One Do You Like to Eat












