Thousands of satellites rendered in real-time 3D on a textured Earth globe. Search by name, filter by country, orbit type, or mission category. Click any object to see its NORAD ID, altitude, speed, inclination, operator, and purpose.
About SkyLens
Everything happening above Earth — in one place.
SkyLens combines live satellite tracking, declassified military UAP evidence, asteroid close approaches, NASA visuals, AI-powered sky analysis, and a daily space blog. Free, no signup required.
The complete PURSUE Release 01 + 02 — 226 military UAP videos and documents, FBI 62-HQ-83894 case file, NASA Apollo photos, State Department cables, and historical records. Every file links to its original government source. Plus 535+ SkyLens editorial deep-dives covering Brazil's Operação Prato, France's GEIPAN cases, USSR Setka programmes, nuclear-facility incursions at Malmstrom/Loring/Wurtsmith, and the contemporary AARO institutional landscape.
Live NASA/JPL data showing near-Earth asteroids with 3D orbital paths, close-approach dates, distances, velocities, and hazard flags. Updated automatically from the CNEOS database.
Ask questions about what's in orbit, get analysis of satellite patterns, orbital anomalies, UAP evidence, and asteroid approaches. Powered by advanced AI with live data context.
3 auto-generated daily posts (07:00, 13:00, 23:00 CET) covering satellite stories, asteroid flybys, rocket launches, space-industry news — produced by the SkyLens editorial automation from live CelesTrak, NASA/JPL, and Spaceflight News data. Each post gets a thematically matched NASA image hero. Plus the searchable 535-post UAP Files Series with 25 sub-topic filters.
Embedded NASA Eyes visualizations for the solar system, Earth, and exoplanets. Official NASA mission tools alongside SkyLens satellite tracking for broader space context.
An automated daily brief showing low-altitude objects, stale tracking data, high-inclination orbits, constellation trends, and upcoming asteroid passes — generated from live CelesTrak and NASA/JPL data.
Save TLE snapshots, compare orbital changes over time, cross-reference against the SATCAT catalog, detect recent launches and reentries, and flag unusual orbit-element shifts.
Step-by-step guides to understand orbit types, TLE data, satellite purposes, research workflows, and how to separate signal from noise in public space data.
Data sources
Satellite positions from CelesTrak public TLE/GP catalogs. Asteroid data from NASA/JPL CNEOS and SBDB. UAP files from war.gov, DVIDS, AARO, FBI, and NASA. All public, all cited, all verifiable.
What makes SkyLens different
Most satellite trackers show dots on a map. Most UAP sites are conspiracy forums. Most asteroid trackers are data tables. SkyLens brings all of these together in one place — with live data, official sources, AI analysis, and a daily blog that explains what's happening in space in plain language. There's nothing else like it.
What to keep in mind
SkyLens is built from public data and visual models. It's useful for learning, exploration, and investigation — but authoritative confirmation always belongs to the original data sources and agencies. Blog posts are editorial summaries, not scientific advisories. SkyLens is not affiliated with any government agency.
Feedback
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