Pics of the Longest Solar Eclipse of the Century 97
Vinod writes "Yesterday thousands of people around Asia witnessed the longest solar eclipse of the century. Although it was not clearly visible in some parts due to overcast weather, thousands of people gathered to view this spectacular event. Yesterday's solar eclipse lasted for 6 to 7 minutes, making it the longest solar eclipse of the century. Here is a collection of 33 beautiful images of the solar eclipse from around the world."
Where are my superpowers? (Score:5, Funny)
I thought eclipses were supposed to cause super powers ... or was it that they took them away? *shakes fist*
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And surely, that last eclipse on Heroes was the longest, rather than this one - certainly more than a few measly minutes! Not to mention the global coverage!
Obviously the result of an as-yet-undiscovered Hero with Super Solar Eclipse powers. Or maybe even something more powerful, like General Purpose Plot Device powers... though I guess that'd be redundant with just about everyone else.
(And please don't complain about spoilers... after the decline since season 1, you can't possibly complain)
Speaking of sp
boston dot com (Score:5, Informative)
these pics look much bigger nicer over at boston.com's The Big Picture, where they were posted yesterday and no doubt scooped and scaled for your link.
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/07/the_longest_solar_eclipse_of_t.html [boston.com]
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these pics look much bigger nicer over at boston.com's The Big Picture, where they were posted yesterday and no doubt scooped and scaled for your link.
To TFAs credit, they didn't just steal the images and scale them: they also did some editing. Specifically they left out the picture of people, including several gross old men, getting into the ganges.
Old man nipples and cherrios don't make for a good morning for me.
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Even things that aren't even remotely, slightly sexual, but show *gasp* skin, are seen as vile, and need to be hidden from sight.
OR I was making a joke about how ugly old man nipples are. Sexual? You're either perverted, can't read, or have never seen old man nipples.
God I hate anonymous trolls.
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The nicest picture of the eclipse was posted here, though:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/03/0329_060329_eclipse.html [nationalgeographic.com]
I literally said "wow" out loud when I saw that.
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The nicest picture of the eclipse was posted here, though:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/03/0329_060329_eclipse.html [nationalgeographic.com]
"my god, it's full of stars!"
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Here's a page with photos of the eclipse from March 26, 2009: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/multimedia/ISS_eclipse_03292006.html [nasa.gov]
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and in terms of bandwidth, a few hundred K might not seem like a lot but when you have hundreds of thousands of visitors each day, it makes a difference - especially considering the website in question, boston.com, is a newspaper's website - and we all know how well newspapers are doing these days.
Multiple sunglasses (Score:4, Interesting)
the dude with four pairs of glasses looking at the solar eclipse. Is that even safe? I understand most sunglasses don't even block the dangerous rays and make it even worse to look toward the sun as your eyes are more dilated and the harmful rays burn your eyes even more.
Comments?
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Here's a comment for you: Be nice.
Oh, and try taking your own advice.
Hey, that rhymed...
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Yeah, cus who gives a fuck if someone thinks that will work and ends up blinding themselves staring at an eclipse!
Seriously, whoever shit in your cheerios this morning, it wasn't the OP.
(it was me)
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No, probably not safe. A #14 welding filter works fine.
rj
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How about the kid under his father with the camera. The kid is obviously looking right at the event!
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When they say the longest eclipse of the century, they mean 2001-2100.
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This resource is no longer valid. Please return to the beginning and try again.
FRUSTRATION...
Re:Oh really? (Score:4, Insightful)
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That "whooshing" sound you hear overhead is not the sound of another solar eclipse.
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Even tho it's early in the century, it might well be the longest eclipse of the century. I imagine that the calculations to predict eclipses and their duration would be relatively straightforward by modern standards. You probably wouldn't even need to take relativity into account.
They're posted here:
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse.html [nasa.gov]
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Even tho it's early in the century, it might well be the longest eclipse of the century. I imagine that the calculations to predict eclipses and their duration would be relatively straightforward by modern standards. You probably wouldn't even need to take relativity into account.
They're not. You don't need GR, but you do need a lot of calculus and geometry. I've done an Astronomy masters by coursework and we didn't even attempt to cover this.
Good approximations however were worked out by the earliest civil
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Some things are obvious early on. For example, the movie "Battlefield Earth" was released in May of 2000, and critics quickly concluded that it was not too early to declare it the worst movie of the century.
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For example, the movie "Battlefield Earth" was released in May of 2000, and critics quickly concluded that it was not too early to declare it the worst movie of the century.
Well, 2000 was the last year of the 20th Century of the Current Era.
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Perhaps but they were talking about the 21st century ;)
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maybe the Earth did, but I didn't. :(
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Simple logic implies this would not work. If the moon were closer, it would need to orbit the earth faster to keep from descending into the planet.
If it were going faster, it wouldn't be in line for an eclipse as long as it is now. If the moon were farther away from the earth, it could orbit slower which would make the eclipse last longer, but might not be a full eclipse.
I'm no astrophysicist, but it seems to me the only easy way to make a solar eclipse last longer would be for the moon to get bigger. So in
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Solar eclipse glasses (Score:2)
Queue jokes about solar eclipse sunglasses made in china ...
in 3... 2... 1...
Re:Solar eclipse glasses (Score:5, Funny)
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Ohh....
¿ Qué ?
Awesome.... (Score:1)
But here in Beijing, all I could see was a think cloud of haze. I couldn't even find the bloody sun. So I went back inside and went to sleep.
Must be a Slashdotter (Score:5, Funny)
I'm guessing that the guy with 3 pairs of sunglasses over his regular glasses must have been a slashdotter. Where else would you find such ingenuity (and such nerdiness)?
Whoever you are, I salute you, my friend.
Re:Must be a Slashdotter (Score:4, Funny)
Answer (Score:2)
Where else would you find such ingenuity (and such nerdiness)?
Yonsei University in Seoul, South Korea according to boston.com.
I remember a partial eclipse here in the states, apparently people were staring at the sun through CDs, which were ineffective. There were warnings on the news to that effect.
The guy taking the picture through exposed X ray films... without knowing anything about those specific films, I'd guess that they wouldn't be doing anything to block UV rays. Does anyone know if they actually do?
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The guy taking the picture through exposed X ray films... without knowing anything about those specific films, I'd guess that they wouldn't be doing anything to block UV rays. Does anyone know if they actually do?
I think that might have been artistic and not an attempt to increase safety.
Real men of genius (Score:2)
We salute you, Mr. Uses-three-pairs-of-sunglasses-to-look-at-the-solar-eclipse guy!
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I'm guessing that the guy with 3 pairs of sunglasses over his regular glasses must have been a slashdotter. Where else would you find such ingenuity (and such nerdiness)?
Whoever you are, I salute you, my friend.
I don't always stare at a solar eclipse, but when I do, I wear three pairs of sunglasses. Stay sightless, my friends.
Everyone brags to have the longest solar eclipse (Score:1, Funny)
When the average solar eclipse is much smaller than 6 minutes.
What glasses are those? (Score:2)
Many of the pics show people wearing what look like disposable glasses to view the eclipse; I thought looking at the sun at any time was a Really Bad Idea (tm) and during an eclipse was supposedly an Even Worse Really Bad Idea.
I guess they now make thin films that are so dark as to be safe to look at the sun now?
Re:What glasses are those? (Score:5, Informative)
One of the big chemical companies is churning out a mylenised film that makes for an effective pair of eclipse glasses. It's a really bad idea to look directly at the sun during an eclipse because the iris expands in response to the low mean light level and provides little to no protection from the high peak light level when the photosphere is visible. Wearing the mylenised glasses doesn't make your iris expand any wider, but it does cut down that peak light level dramatically.
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Would not four pairs of sunglasses achieve the same effect? In essence, the radiation emanating from the sun during an eclipse is no different than during regular daylight, and if sunglasses are effective for normal use then using a sufficient number of pairs (of sufficiently dark glasses) should be equally effective during an eclipse.
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Well, most lasers don't emit radiation in the UV spectrum, so according to your theory those shouldn't hurt your eyes either! In reality, the energy from sufficiently strong radiation in spectra other than UV can damage your eyes.
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Actually, during totality, looking at the sun (or rather, the moon and the solar corona) completely unfiltered is a Not Bad If You Know What You're Doing Idea. But you're supposed to look away as soon as totality ends, and it's easier to recommend nobody looks at all than to try educating people on the difference between total, partial, and annular eclipses, and the different stages of a total eclipse.
And since the introduction of arc welding, suitable thin films have been used in lenses for welding helmets
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They're only useful during the partial phase of the eclipse. During totality, they're not necessary, and in fact you won't be able to see anything with them on.
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I thought looking at the sun at any time was a Really Bad Idea (tm) and during an eclipse was supposedly an Even Worse Really Bad Idea.
But... that's where the fun is!
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Well, the pictures did show some runners in the night...
Aye, look what ye've doon NOW... (Score:2)
Oh, and it's spelt "TEH ASIA".
"nearly 6 to 7 minutes"? (Score:1, Informative)
How about "6m39s"? Some people forget that we have freaking good models and instruments nowadays. Even if you don't know that, it should be intuitive that we wouldn't be able to determine which one is the longest of the century with only minute-level precision.
Was this the longest solar eclipse of the century? (Score:1)
TFS doesn't make it very clear. It should have stated it a few more times.
When "The Media" hypes science stories they always proclaim this kind of shit. What they don't say, for instance, is how much longer is this eclipse than the second longest one.
Maybe one millisecond, who knows.
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Actually, that's an interesting point. What's the typical length of a solar eclipse?
I'd actually expect most total eclipses to last about the same length... the moon covers the sun, the moon's speed doesn't vary all that much. Well, I guess the earth's speed does vary on its elliptical orbit (angular velocity varies, while the area swept is constant, something like that... I'm not sure what the correct terminology was), so since the earth's speed varies, the length of an eclipse might be longer or shorter d
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I've had that "invisible rectangle" since coming onto FF3.5. I suspect some obscure bug in the slashcode.
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Off-topic, I know.... just trying to help.
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Not that one. Fx 3.5 highlights a bug in the slashcode. What you are seeing in Chrome is added to every textarea automatically by Chrome itself, not a bug in the slashcode.
Copied from Flickr (Score:1)
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Lunar Shadow (Score:2)
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Maybe India will release a video soon:
A 10-member team of scientists from the premier Indian Institute of Astrophysics in Bangalore and the Indian air force filmed the eclipse from an airplane, an air force press release said. But millions across India shunned the sight and planned to stay indoors.
Interestingly enough, the next paragraph is a huge WTF:
Even in regions where the eclipse was not visible, pregnant women were advised to stay indoors in curtained rooms, due to a belief that the sun's invisible rays would harm the fetus and the baby would be born with disfigurations, birthmarks or a congenital defect.
Why would the moon being in front of the sun make these "invisible rays" more dangerous than being in direct sunlight?
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Oblig Simpsons Quote (Score:1)
The goggles! They do nothing!
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See YOU on the Dark Side of the Moon (Score:2)
Science isn't everything. Coincidence of congruent angles isn't as cool as people living under an eclipse.
We are ALL lucky to live on this planet. How many other planets have eclipses like these?
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Can see why this would be regarded as meaningful (Score:2)
... by sufficently primitive people. It's quite amazing to see, but also quite freaky at the same time. I can imagine people who didn't understand the concept of planets and moons and the sun and how they all fit together to find this sort of thing as indicative of some greater event. I suppose you'd also have to have quite a self-centered view of the universe to believe that way, but I guess that's part and parcel with not understanding what is going on; if you don't get it, assume it's all about you.
The Eclipse Pics I took from Japan (Score:2)
It's my first time photographing an eclipse so the pictures aren't "Professional Quality" but they're not awful either.
My experience (Score:1)
I saw the eclipse from Delhi. 83% totality.
However it was cloudy till 6:30am. 6:26 was the max phase.
From 6:30 to 6:45 clouds relented, and I could actually take a few pics.
Here you go!
http://tanveer.smugmug.com/gallery/8996323_Jy27n [smugmug.com]