Anonymous 06/09/21 (Wed) 16:47:27 No. 127140 >>127142
Not even close... Still, what a bizarre path it follows. It's really no wonder that people would go on cruise ships just to see it since it tends to cover large areas of land and wilderness
Anonymous 06/09/21 (Wed) 18:58:52 No. 127141
In the jaypee state, so I may just be able to catch a glimpse of it.
Anonymous 06/09/21 (Wed) 21:27:29 No. 127143 >>127144 >>127145 >>127146 >>127156
how do i view this without burning my eyes out?
Anonymous 06/09/21 (Wed) 21:38:10 No. 127144
>>127143 Get some cool as
HELL sunglasses.
Anonymous 06/09/21 (Wed) 22:56:55 No. 127147 >>127148
>>127145 could i just use my fingers? if leaves do it then wouldn't that
Anonymous 06/10/21 (Thu) 06:28:27 No. 127148
>>127147 Yes, your fingers can also work for making an image of the sun on a surface.
Anonymous 06/10/21 (Thu) 09:21:52 No. 127149 >>127150
bleh, eclipse should be around now but the sky is covered in clouds
Anonymous 06/10/21 (Thu) 09:53:44 No. 127151
it's too sunny, I can't look at it Also minor cloud cover is distorting the light. Looks a little less bright outside
Anonymous 06/10/21 (Thu) 10:27:42 No. 127152 >>127153 >>127154
>>127139 I... I dont understand that video...
Anonymous 06/10/21 (Thu) 10:53:06 No. 127153
>>127152 the yellow and stuff is the moons position over the earth
Anonymous 06/10/21 (Thu) 15:59:30 No. 127154
>>127152 The yellow is where there's a partial eclipse and the red is where there's an annular eclipse.
Anonymous 06/10/21 (Thu) 17:25:52 No. 127155
It's too cloudy here :c
Anonymous 06/10/21 (Thu) 18:38:18 No. 127156
>>127142 Oh. Yeah, that does make a lot more sense.
>>127143 Don't look, feel.
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 18:06:09 No. 127158
>>127157 Went outside to take a picture and I barely see a difference. I'm not going to run back and forth to upload an image every 5 minutes here, but I'm taking pictures and I'll dump them later
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 18:21:02 No. 127159
Montreal has 2 min of totality in 50 min or so
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 18:29:35 No. 127163
Not really noticable in pictures but it's eclipsing from 4 o'clock
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 18:31:42 No. 127165 >>127166 >>127167
>>127164 Dark or is that a low ISO
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 18:35:07 No. 127166
>>127165 The sun is really, really bright.
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 18:53:40 No. 127173
Messing with shutter speed mid video
>>127170 Scenic
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 18:59:15 No. 127176 >>127183
>>127174 It'll only et really spooky once the second eye opens in
>>127164 .
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 19:05:09 No. 127180
Is an app though
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 19:06:36 No. 127181
>>127178 Well... Your camera is focused on the foreground, not at infinity to focus on the Sun.
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 19:21:06 No. 127186
Luminosity does drop off a lot ... Like 7 min until total here
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 19:23:56 No. 127187
Oly... It's so easy to accidentally glance at it
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 19:37:38 No. 127188
trying to upload a 200mb video. will have to directly upload
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 19:42:55 No. 127190
you can actually see it shift easily through a camera
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 20:11:26 No. 127191 >>127192
Man, that must have been really cool. People say it's something you'll remember for the rest of your life, so do you think it's true?
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 20:16:21 No. 127192
>>127191 I remember back when I was kid, on our family home's roof garden, observing an eclipse along with the rest of the fmily. But not so much because the event was so impressive and memorable, but because I felt that all the excitement and effort that we had put into the observation had been completely wasted.
I might think differently today. But back then my opinion was "okay, so the sun was eclipsed. That happens literally every night."
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 20:23:54 No. 127193
it's neat to see the sun doing something strange.
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 20:53:06 No. 127197 >>127198 >>127199
>>127196 wonder how it looks literally in space and not as a shadow
Anonymous 04/08/24 (Mon) 20:58:38 No. 127198
>>127197 No atmospheric effects without an atmosphere.
Anonymous 04/09/24 (Tue) 20:22:32 No. 127199 >>127200
>>127197 I don't think it would work. If you were in space between the Moon and the Earth, the Moon would take up more of your field of vision so you wouldn't see the Sun's corona like you can from Earth. You'd still be able to see the partial eclipse happening though. The type of orbit matters, however. You would have to be in a geostationary orbit, orbiting the Earth at the same rate that it spins, for the eclipse to happen at the same time as it does on Earth. Otherwise you could probably observe the Moon eclipsing the Sun pretty often. The Internation Space Station, which is in low Earth orbit, for instance, makes 16 orbits around the Earth every 24 hours.
Anonymous 04/09/24 (Tue) 20:34:27 No. 127200
>>127199 If you are going to space for an eclipse, there is no reason why you should have to stay between the Earth and the moon. All that is required is that you find a circular body that you can use to just obscure the sun with, (meaning you need to be the right distance from that body).
That could be the moon, it could also be Earth itself.