photoephemeris, to random
@photoephemeris@indieapps.space avatar

Here's a brief write-up of our trip to northern Mexico for the April 8 eclipse. More videos and photos on the blog:

https://photoephemeris.com/articles/april-8-eclipse-in-review

kellylepo, to random
@kellylepo@astrodon.social avatar
naz, to Astronomy
@naz@astrodon.social avatar

Reprocessed with a focus on the prominences. Happy with the result here although I want to redo it again to see if I can get better detail on the corona. 🔭🧪

Tutorial on how I did this is here: https://youtu.be/iwCxuDQ2Los

absolutspacegrl, to random
@absolutspacegrl@mastodon.social avatar

I forgot to upload my pic, so here you go! From Kerrville, Texas - April 8, 2024.

It was cloudy, but we had almost 4.5 mins of totality so there were a few moments where we could see it!

JohnBarentine, to random
@JohnBarentine@astrodon.social avatar

Five days out from , I'm working through the experience and processing it both psychologically and digitally.

These images from around totality, are still frames extracted from white-light HD video made near Kerrville, Texas. Far from ruining the experience, the clouds overhead at our site added a haunting, ethereal quality to the result.

image/png
image/png
image/png

JohnBarentine,
@JohnBarentine@astrodon.social avatar

I was running a Coronado PST on a tracking mount and taking images with my phone. This sequence just before and at second contact shows features in the solar chromosphere disappearing as the eclipse becomes total. Time increases from top to bottom.

The second image is essentially the same sequence in white light taken through a 100-mm refractor at the same time.

image/png

rickberkphoto, to art
@rickberkphoto@mastodon.social avatar
bkeegan, (edited ) to random
@bkeegan@hci.social avatar

Four days later, what word below best describes the online conversational health of in a post-Twitter social architecture?

What’s it like out there in the hashtag feeds right now? https://hci.social/@bkeegan/112222115753230127

GeriAQuin, to random
@GeriAQuin@mstdn.social avatar
rickberkphoto, to maine
@rickberkphoto@mastodon.social avatar

Another from the eclipse on Monday. Taken at Rangeley Lake, in Maine, during the totality for the main image. The other instances of the eclipse were composited in, in the position they were in at the time the image was taken. Each instance of the eclipse if 15 minutes after the previous instance. Prints available.

https://rickberk.pixels.com/featured/the-shadow-of-the-moon-rick-berk.html

patioboater, to photography
@patioboater@mastodon.social avatar

I've finally started to sort out the eclipse photos from my big camera. This came just a few seconds after my diamond ring photo, so let's call this a ruby ring.

I'm not completely sure what's going on here to create the red color. I think the red is from the Sun's chromosphere. Then maybe the red is being refracted then scattered a bit by the high cloud cover we had during totality. ¯_(ツ)_/¯

April 8, 2024. Van Wert, Ohio.

CausesEffects, to Humor

Saw this on the bird and just had to share 😂

sdeibel, to random
@sdeibel@masto.ai avatar

My view of the 3.5 minute totality in Sherbrooke Quebec, April 8, 2024. The surprise for me and clearly 100's of astonished people around me, was the huge difference between 99% and totality. At 99% the sun is still incredibly bright and you cannot look at with the naked eye. Then in an instant it sort of flashes and goes black and you can look directly at the eclipse without a filter. It was actually much darker on the ground than the camera made it look in this photo.

View of people standing in the darkness watching the totality during the April 8th 2024 solar eclipse in Sherbrooke Quebec. The sky is dark, with the planet Venus visible, and street lights have turned on.

mookie, to flatearth
@mookie@mookiesplace.com avatar

I don't understand why the solar eclipse path was curved. The Earth is flat, shouldn't it be a straight line?

Thank you, I'll be here all week.

slcw, to random
@slcw@newsie.social avatar

Dear Rep. Jackson-Lee...

Its OK to be scientifically ignorant. But it's not OK to be scientifically ignorant, and stand before a crowd of students and make assertions as if they were fact. And it's not OK to respond to people who point out the absurdity of your unscientific remarks with deflections and insults. You said something dumb. Just acknowledge it, correct it, and move on.

https://nypost.com/2024/04/09/us-news/sheila-jackson-lee-tells-students-the-moon-is-a-planet-made-up-mostly-of-gases/

kaminote, to photography
@kaminote@sfba.social avatar

The moment we clear the moon’s shadow

jessamyn, to random
@jessamyn@glammr.us avatar

I realized I'd been spreading my observations across a bunch of different platforms so I wrote up some notes for a blog post and paired them with a small Flickr photo gallery.

tl;dr I had a good time.

https://www.jessamyn.com/journal/2024/04/eclipse-2024-in-vermont

kichae, to random

Totality

For 3 minutes & 20 seconds, the Sun's surface remained totally hidden, and we lived within the Moon's shadow. In the sky hung a black orb, surrounded by brilliant, diamond-like fire, with splashes of hot pink, and a bright, ghostly aura.

The pink areas are solar prominences, giant arches of solar material that dive in and out of the Sun's surface, powered by its strong magnetic fields. The white is the Sun's corona, it's upper atmosphere.

kichae, to random

The March of the Moon

Over the course of an hour, the Moon slowly engulfed the Sun, taking a gradually larger bite out of it until, mere seconds before totality, there was nothing left but the thinnest of slivers. As this occurred, the landscape gradually became darker, as if it were close to sunset, but the light somehow became harsher as it grew dimmer. Things felt as if some kind of cinematic filter was being used in real life.

kichae, to random

After just a few minutes, the Sun is noticeably eclipsed by the Moon. It took just over an hour from the start to reach totality.

The edge of the Sun appears darker than the centre, an effect known as limb-darkening. This occurs because the Sun is cooler at the top of its atmosphere than it is deeper down. Regions of the sun that are cooler give off less light, and at the edges we are only seeing the cooler upper layers of the atmosphere, so they appear darker.

constantorbit, to random
@constantorbit@hachyderm.io avatar

Everybody's probably suffering from fatigue, but just one here from me.

It was a LOOONG day but it was SO worth it.

This is during totality, from northeast of St Albans VT. Note the planets.

It was indescribable. Very emotional. I wasn't prepared for my reaction.

kichae, to random

The Eclipse Begins

The first seconds of the total solar eclipse, with the Moon just starting to clip the limb of the Sun on the lower right side.

Near the centre and upper left of the Sun are prominent sunspots, regions of the Sun's atmosphere that are held in place by powerful magnetic fields. This allows them to cool without sinking back into lower layers to reheat. Being cooler than their surroundings means they give off less light, and so appear as dark spots.

aby, to ConspiracyTheories
@aby@aus.social avatar

In today's episode of Watching the Eclipse Watchers, some Opinions about science:

  • the eclipse is fake news, because I saw a video of it were it glitches and everything moved to the left (obviously the camera was moved to get a better angle, nobody moved the astral bodies)

  • you know they lie to us about all this because you can see the sun and moon are the same size

  • "somebody explain to me how the moon, which is transparent/translucent during the day, blocks the sun out I'll wait 😂"

  • discussion over how this is an event in a spiritual war, because of shadow bands*


Shadow bands are actually super interesting phenomenon:
https://www.space.com/37776-shadow-bands-are-a-solar-eclipse-mystery.html

herrsaalfeld, to random
@herrsaalfeld@mastodon.social avatar
tiamat271, to Colorado
@tiamat271@mastodon.online avatar

Did you use a colander to see or take pics of the eclipse? I know we laugh at it, but I seriously enjoy seeing others’ colander pics. In such a divided time, at least we all have colanders in common! Anyone remember Hands Across America? This is like that, but with colanders 🤣 Please post your pics and use the hashtag (and maybe ?). Here’s mine, from :

tiamat271,
@tiamat271@mastodon.online avatar

Thanks to all who have shared their colander (and other assorted household items) eclipse photos!

So far, we have representation from the following states:

AZ
CA
CO
IN
MD
ME
PA

We’ve stretched from sea to shining sea!

Please continue to share and let’s see if we can get even more!

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • anitta
  • InstantRegret
  • thenastyranch
  • mdbf
  • khanakhh
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • vwfavf
  • everett
  • rosin
  • kavyap
  • Durango
  • PowerRangers
  • DreamBathrooms
  • Leos
  • magazineikmin
  • hgfsjryuu7
  • ethstaker
  • tacticalgear
  • osvaldo12
  • ngwrru68w68
  • GTA5RPClips
  • cisconetworking
  • modclub
  • cubers
  • tester
  • normalnudes
  • provamag3
  • All magazines