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Forums - General - Don't forget Solar eclipse on Sunday May 20

We think of the Earth as being special for any number of reasons, but this is perhaps in the grand scheme of things the most incredible of them all. Earth like planets might not be rare, but what has to be exceedingly rare is for such a planet to also have a moon. That not only passes between the planet and the star, but is of almost the exact size to blot out the star. The chances of such a confluence have to be ridiculously small. In fact this hasn't even always been the case. The moon is receding over time so billions of years ago it was bigger, and in a billion years it will not totally cover the sun.

We really should appreciate how truly lucky we are to have such a magnificent astronomical site in our own back yard. Thanks for posting I have to figure out the best vantage point. I probably won't be seeing it from my back yard, because the sun sets behind the tree line, but maybe down the roads a way. I would have hated to miss this.



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I remember back in elementary school (I think it was '94 or '95) we had a solar eclipse directly overhead, and we weren't allowed outside for gym or recess because the teachers feared some of us would look up at the sun and ruin our eyes. Good times lol.



On 2/24/13, MB1025 said:
You know I was always wondering why no one ever used the dollar sign for $ony, but then I realized they have no money so it would be pointless.

:/ Tokyo. Miss it already



Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.

Mr Khan said:
:/ Tokyo. Miss it already

Wait, you are back in the States? Wow, that must suck hard. :/



NintendoPie said:
Mr Khan said:
:/ Tokyo. Miss it already

Wait, you are back in the States? Wow, that must suck hard. :/

Come Monday i'll have been back a whole month.



Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.

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TWRoO said:
SvennoJ said:
oldschoolfool said:
meh,I guess it would be cool to look at,but I just don't see the point. I'll go look at the sunset are something. lol

It sorta makes the moon feel more real then a flat disc moving accross the sky at night.
It puts the solar system into perspective, we're just specks of dust on a giant piece of clockwork.

I think it's a good way of showing the enormous size of the Sun... despite being nearly 400 times further away it rivals it in percieved size.

The Venus transit coming on June 5th demonstrates that even better.
Venus is almost the same size as earth and the sun is still 3.5 times further away then Venus and it looks like this




Mr Khan said:
NintendoPie said:
Mr Khan said:
:/ Tokyo. Miss it already

Wait, you are back in the States? Wow, that must suck hard. :/

Come Monday i'll have been back a whole month.

Wow... I didn't even know. Is it boring/does it suck?



Dodece said:
We think of the Earth as being special for any number of reasons, but this is perhaps in the grand scheme of things the most incredible of them all. Earth like planets might not be rare, but what has to be exceedingly rare is for such a planet to also have a moon. That not only passes between the planet and the star, but is of almost the exact size to blot out the star. The chances of such a confluence have to be ridiculously small. In fact this hasn't even always been the case. The moon is receding over time so billions of years ago it was bigger, and in a billion years it will not totally cover the sun.

We really should appreciate how truly lucky we are to have such a magnificent astronomical site in our own back yard. Thanks for posting I have to figure out the best vantage point. I probably won't be seeing it from my back yard, because the sun sets behind the tree line, but maybe down the roads a way. I would have hated to miss this.

It's not a full eclipse this time, the moon is too far away this time. The distance varies between 363,300 km and 405,500 km.
This time the moon is near it's apogee so we have an annular eclipse.

The moon orbit is messy.

I don't know how rare the sun, earth, moon combination is but the number 4 comes up a lot.
The sun is 400 times larger then the moon and 400 times further away, while the moon is 1/4 the diameter of earth.

And yes we're losing the moon at 3.8 cm a year, in exchange we get longer days at the rate of 2ms per 100 years.
We don't have to wait billions of years, in 1.1 million years the closest the moon will get is the furthest is gets today.
I guess we live in a special time since we get both types of eclipses, 1 million years ago there were only total eclipses.



This is what I managed to see, next chance in 2024





haha you saw a lot , i saw nothing from miami. when i was a kid like 7 i remember we had one of these eclipses.