B U.S. Solar Eclipses - Oct. 14, 2023 (Annular) & Apr. 08, 2024 (Total)

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The U.S. will experience an annular solar eclipse on October 14, 2023, followed by a total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024, prompting discussions about travel plans to view these events. Participants emphasize the importance of booking accommodations early, as hotels filled quickly during the 2017 eclipse. Resources such as state maps and NASA's eclipse data are shared to help plan optimal viewing locations. The difference between total and partial eclipses is highlighted, with many expressing the profound impact of witnessing totality. Overall, excitement builds for these upcoming celestial events, with some planning gatherings to enhance the experience.
  • #51
russ_watters said:
I'll be livestreaming the view through my larger telescope via facebook live. Here's the link:
https://fb.me/e/209iObXeI
Watching. Looks awesome. :biggrin:
 
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  • #52
About 35 minutes to totality. Thin clouds have moved in, making the sky various shades of milky blue or bluish milk. The partial phases show up fine through eclipse glasses.
 
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  • #53
Borg said:
Watching. Looks awesome. :biggrin:
Looks like the live stream ended after 22 minutes.
 
  • #54
@russ_waters I do see your live stream now.
 
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  • #55
Borg said:
Looks like the live stream ended after 22 minutes.
A connectivity issue stopped the stream, sorry. I did restart, but it can't be restarted with the same stream, so they were separate links. Only a few people were able to get back on. I can't even see it on my own page right now, but will post a new link if it comes back. I did get some really good photos though. There was even a naked-eye visible solar flare.
 
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  • #56
russ_watters said:
A connectivity issue stopped the stream, sorry. I did restart, but it can't be restarted with the same stream, so they were separate links. Only a few people were able to get back on. I can't even see it on my own page right now, but will post a new link if it comes back. I did get some really good photos though. There was even a naked-eye visible solar flare.
I did see it when it came back and even saw you posting that you weren't sure if the stream was running. :smile:
 
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  • #57
Hot off the press, so to speak:

DSC_6988-St copy.jpeg


This image is downscaled about 2:1- really excited that I have some good shots!
 
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  • #58
Animation of coming out of totality reversed to look like going in:

 
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  • #59
 
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  • #60
Unfortunately I had some clouds so I didn't get any clear pictures of totality.
ring.jpg

I did get a good picture of the lake I was watching from
Lake.jpg

And I saw a fox!
fox.jpg


BoB

ETA: Lake Bonaparte NY.
 
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  • #61
The thin clouds at our location didn’t prevent a good show at totality. The ring of the inner corona was clearly visible against a translucent blue-gray background.

I attempted some hand-held shots with my Nikon D7000 similar to the one I posted of the 2017 eclipse, using various exposures. I’ll see what I can do with them in Photoshop after I get home in a couple of days.

As we drove back to our hotel about an hour away, over local roads, we passed over the Ohio Turnpike (route I-80). The eastbound lanes were packed with cars heading towards Pennsylvania and presumably other points further east.
 
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  • #62
jtbell said:
The thin clouds at our location didn’t prevent a good show at totality.
The clouds did obscure totality at my location considerably. But this was my first totality so it was totally awesome anyway.

BoB
 
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  • #63
We also had a parallel "thriller" sub-plot for this trip.

During the second day of our two-day drive from South Carolina, my 11-year-old Chevy's "check engine" light came on. We stopped at a Chevy dealer in the next town. The guy who could run the diagnostics wasn't there that day, but the guy running the service desk said so long as the light stayed steady instead of flashing, and we didn't notice any changes in the engine's running, we could probably continue safely.

Of course we couldn't do anything about it over the weekend after we arrived. This morning we called a local Chevy dealer, and the shop was able to work us in at 10:30. It turned out we had a cracked air intake duct. They were able to get a replacement quickly and install it. We arrived at our eclipse-viewing site, a half hour away, about 1:00.

I suppose if it had taken longer to get the replacement part, they could have slapped on some duct tape, we could have gone on to watch the eclipse, and then come back the next day for the permanent fix, delaying our return home by a day. But now we're all set.
 
  • #64
A few minutes from totality, the automatic streetlights came on:

IMG_0464.jpeg
 
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  • #65
Andy Resnick said:
Hot off the press, so to speak:

View attachment 343015
As I was shooting pictures with my Nikon SLR, I generally used a normal or wide angle setting so as to include nearby trees and buildings. Towards the end I went to a moderate telephoto setting (about 100mm) and noticed a red spot at the bottom of the coronal ring. Uh-oh, I thought, the end of the eclipse is upon us, and stopped shooting. The following first flash of sunlight was much brighter.

When I saw Andy's picture I realized that I must have seen a solar flare prominence. I wonder if it showed up in my last picture.... hmmm, enlarging it in the camera's LCD screen... not enough detail to show the flare itself, but the coronal circle does look a bit reddish there.
 
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  • #66
There was (well, probably stiill is) a fairly large red/pink prominence near the bottom of the sun.

The weather girl that one channel had doing the announcement said it was helium, but to me it looked a lot like a hydrogen gas discharge tube.
 
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  • #68
Belatedlly, here's probably the best one of my photos of the eclipse from my Nikon DSLR. First, the original JPEG, unaltered except for cropping. Second, a version tweaked from the RAW file.

DSC_5468-orig.jpg

DSC_5468-corr-v2.jpg
 
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  • #69
I had this in my files to post (regarding a sungrazing comet - see ahead) - goes back to eclipse time - really interesting, take a look
(posted on spaceweather.com on April 10 & 11, 2024) :

" THIS COMET DID NOT SURVIVE THE ECLIPSE: Astronomer Karl Battams of the Naval Research Lab predicted that a sungrazing comet might be visible during Monday's total eclipse. He was right. Chinese amateur astronomer Lin Zixuan was in New Hampshire for the eclipse, and he photographed the disintegrating comet:

soho5008_strip.jpg

Named "SOHO-5008", the comet had been discovered earlier the same day by amateur astronomer Worachate Boonplod, who noticed it in SOHO coronagraph images. Battams quickly realized that the comet might be bright enough to photograph in the otherworldly twilight of the Moon's shadow.

"Ground-based observations of sungrazing comets are extremely rare, so this would be a great opportunity to see an eclipse comet!" says Battams.

Soon after Zixuan photographed the comet, it disintegrated. SOHO has seen this happen more than 5000 times. Most doomed sungrazers (including this one) are members of the Kreutz family. Named after a 19th century German astronomer who studied them in detail, Kreutz sungrazers are fragments from the breakup of a giant comet ~2000 years ago. Several fragments pass by the sun and disintegrate every day, although most are too small to see.

2024_sungrazer_strip.jpg

A SOHO coronagraph image of the disintegrating comet​

Battams can recall only two other examples of sungrazers seen during a solar eclipse--one in 2020 (also a Worachate Boonplod discovery) and another in 2008. " I think with modern imaging equipment and techniques, seeing a sungrazer during an eclipse is no longer hugely challenging, but it does require one crucial ingredient: the right comet at the right time. We got lucky this week!" he says. "
 
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