Solar Eclipse, As Seen From Mir 73
David Schick writes "This cool picture was the Astronomy Picture of the Day from the Goddard Space Flight Center on August 30. Apparently, someone on Mir had a chance to take a snapshot of the solar eclipse over Europe. Kudos to Brian B. Riley on the AMSAT-BB mailing list for finding this cool nugget. " Check out the image archive while you're there. Several little files that meet Rob's First Rule of Art [?] .
Mirrors? (Score:1)
Thanks!
Jeff Higgins
www.hal9000.cc
Definitely a sight to see (Score:2)
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
You wouldn't think... (Score:1)
Re:Definitely a sight to see (Score:1)
two words: (Score:1)
mental note: build space station; take pictures of eclipses from said space station.
--
Matt Singerman
You were in the south of Germany? (Score:1)
I thought the weather was especially bad there? Nothing but rain in Stuttgart...
What part of the Earth? (Score:1)
And those two dots in the background, that can't be stars, can they? I'd think it's space junk. Heck, perhaps it's debris from Mir itself...
Re:You wouldn't think... (Score:1)
I agree (Score:1)
But why not a webcam in space? Ideally, turn over one of those older and obsolete spy satellites for public use, and work out some equitable and efficient means of selecting view targets thru a web page.
Jim
Re:You wouldn't think... (Score:1)
Re:I agree (Score:2)
yes yes (Score:1)
Man that pick is cool. It just went onto my desktop.
Re:I agree (Score:3)
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:Mirrors? (Score:2)
These all point to the picture of the day (which is of Earth, though it doesn't look like it!), of course: you'll have to head to the archives to find the eclipse picture. They've been carrying loads of eclipse pictures recently, and they're beautiful.
My socks! (Score:2)
> I'd think it's space junk. Heck, perhaps it's debris from Mir itself...
No, it's not. What you see are two of my white socks! They just disapear sometimes (especially the right ones), now I know what happen: The rotation+the magnetic fields inside my washing machine opens up wormholes and they're transfered up into space..
*That's* why you should not wash pets in a washing machine.
Re:You wouldn't think... (Score:2)
If the sun were instead a point source, then the shadow would be much sharper. Since it and the moon are the same angular size, though, the center of the shadow gets complete blockage of the sun, a quarter of the way out from the center you get mostly complete blockage, etc. This continues all the way out to the edges where the moon is only nibbling away at the sun's disc, and the shadow on the Earth is correspondingly minimum.
(And they said my Physics degree would be useless
Re:Definitely a sight to see (Score:2)
A) they stuck it out for so long, and
B) They're in space and I'm not.
Thanks for the point. I agree, but my comment wasn't about the photo in particular. I envy [all space travellers] because they get to see phenominal views with that picture being an example.
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:What part of the Earth? (Score:1)
So long Mir
-kabloie
Imagine.. (Score:2)
Actually..... (Score:1)
Re:Themes (Score:1)
The Mir one would be excessively sweet as a theme, yes. There's some even better ones in the archives, too :)
Re:What part of the Earth? (Score:2)
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap9 90810.html [nasa.gov] - This is a link to a diagram of the Eclipse's path.
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
What this really says to me... (Score:1)
Humbling, no? So beautiful.
Reminds me of a Radiohead song or three. hehehe
I was there! (Score:1)
A pity that it was over in 2 minutes :)
Moon shadows (Score:2)
Eclipse (Score:1)
Re:Eclipse (Score:1)
http://www.spanner.org/eclipse.html (Score:2)
http://www.spanner.org/eclipse.html [spanner.org]
Re:Hey what would happen...... (Score:1)
Damn cool (Score:1)
It almost looks like a CG render. Hard to tell what is real and what is not these days.
Wish there were an MPEG!/Next Image: Mitosis (Score:1)
Also, at the bottom of that page is a link to the Next Pictue [nasa.gov]. Is it me or does this look interestingly like mitosis (or was it meiosis)?
BBC had Mir video footage of the eclipse (Score:1)
Re:Imagine.. (Score:1)
hehehehehe
What took so long? (Score:1)
Remember Io and Jupiter? (Score:3)
Re:Remember Io and Jupiter? (Score:1)
I was in the path of totality for the recent eclipse. We had 10/10 cloud cover and it was still awe-inspiring.
See you in Africa for the next one.
Mir over Paris during eclipse (Score:2)
Just as Paco Rabanne claimed in his book on Nostradamus. Of course, nothing has happened, but I was actually slightly freaked out when I heard radio amateurs (HAMs) in france trying to contact the Mir 90 minutes before the eclipse. The Mir orbits the earth about once every 90 minutes, and its next pass put it near Paris just as the eclipse hit the west coast of France. Freaky!
Just a bit of random, off topic rambling from...
the AC
Wrong colour... (Score:1)
I tried to describe it to people who weren't in the path of totality and failed. It is unbelievably strange. I want to see another one. Africa anybody?
Saw something interesting... (Score:1)
Re:Actually..... (Score:1)
Cliff Palmer, Jr.
Re:Remember Io and Jupiter? (Score:1)
webcam in space? AMSAT P3D could do that (Score:1)
Though P3D may be new to many Slashdot readers, Amateur Radio ("Ham Radio") operators around the world have been working on it for years. AMSAT reports that the satellite just passed the vibration and spin tests and the next step is to get it to the launch site, where it will fly as a secondary payload on a rocket with a commercial satellite to launch. It's something like the 33rd Amateur Radio satellite (not counting the Ham Radio stations on Mir and the Space Shuttles.) The launch date has not been announced yet - should be late thie year or early next year.
Once P3D is up, all you need is a Ham Radio license and you can transmit to talk to people on it. Even the entry level licenses with no Morse Code requirements will do. For info on getting a US Amateur Radio license, check out the American Radio Relay League [arrl.org] or an Amateur Radio club in your area.
Monolith attack (Score:1)
Just a passing thought.
--
High Resolution Shots? (Score:1)
Re:webcam in space? AMSAT P3D could do that (Score:1)
Or are they taken down already... }}:-(
(always in class, when MIR decides to fly over..., and missing a vital link between TNC->HT)
From the MIR point (Score:1)
many times the same day.
The shuttle takes 90min to make a complete orbit.
Anyway, APOD rulz
Oliver
Re:Saw something interesting... (Score:1)
seriously, yeah you don't have to enlarge it to see it, but it must be huge if it is not an artifact of the photo.
Re:Hey what would happen...... (Score:1)
Re:Wrong colour... (Score:1)
I say the last one
Re:High Resolution Shots? (Score:1)
You can get a high-res (2096x2604) gif via http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~jgc/hubble.html [mpa-garching.mpg.de]
Re:Hey what would happen...... (Score:1)
Earth's moon is quite large compared to most other planets in the solar system.
I'm just speculating.. anyone care to comment? I would think it might help keep things jumping and shaking, you know.. circulating the water. Causing rain. Et cetera.
Ideas?
kaniff -- Ralph Hart Jr
Re:webcam in space? AMSAT P3D could do that (Score:1)
No, they powered down all but the most critical systems before they left Mir.
Their plans are to send another crew up later to prepare to de-orbit the station. Actually, they still hold out hope of finding funding to resume operation of the station. But they've got to do that before the next time the computer crashes, since no one's on board to reset it now. Otherwise, there won't be attitude control needed to dock with it, and won't be any way to pick where it burns up and impacts the Earth.
Re:What part of the Earth? (Score:1)
We had the MIR pictures on Live during the Eclipse in Denmark and I suspect in other European countries as well.