ApolloHoax.net
Off Topic => General Discussion => Topic started by: LunarOrbit 🇨🇦 on April 01, 2024, 02:18:15 PM
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Is anyone else as excited for the April 8 eclipse as I am? If the weather cooperates I'm going to try to livestream the view from my telescope on YouTube. I've never tried anything like that before, so if the weather doesn't doom it to fail, my inexperience will. ;)
I have a Celestron NexStar 127SLT with a solar filter and a USB camera that replaces the eyepiece. I won't be viewing the eclipse through the telescope directly, even with the filter. I'm a total novice with the telescope, but this is too rare of an opportunity to miss.
I've also created a website that will provide links to as many YouTube livestreams as I can find in one place. Here's a sneak peek...
https://totaleclipse.live (https://totaleclipse.live)
Feel free to share any other livestreams that I'm missing. I'm sure there will be more and they just haven't been scheduled on YouTube yet.
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I'm on my way to visit my daughter in TX. Was planning on viewing the eclipse, but the forecast is for cloudy weather. I will not be driving to search for clear skies that day.
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I'm on my way to visit my daughter in TX. Was planning on viewing the eclipse, but the forecast is for cloudy weather. I will not be driving to search for clear skies that day.
It looks like I'll probably be getting rain that day... but I'm hoping for a miracle. I would have expected clear skies in Texas, so I hope you get them too.
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I'm on my way to visit my daughter in TX. Was planning on viewing the eclipse, but the forecast is for cloudy weather. I will not be driving to search for clear skies that day.
If you listen to the Skeptics Guide to the Universe, that might be the infamous 'Bob Effect'.
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I am looking forward to the eclipse, especially since the path is only a 3 hours drive. However, the predictions are not good (Cleveland, 65% cloud cover). Still, the reason we chose Cleveland is because of the "Lake Erie bubble" which can produce clear skies near the lake even though it is cloudy inland. (Beyond that, I do not know the science behind it and whether it will help with the type of clouds predicted.)
Good luck to everyone else that is attempting to see it.
John
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I am looking forward to the eclipse, especially since the path is only a 3 hours drive. However, the predictions are not good (Cleveland, 65% cloud cover). Still, the reason we chose Cleveland is because of the "Lake Erie bubble" which can produce clear skies near the lake even though it is cloudy inland. (Beyond that, I do not know the science behind it and whether it will help with the type of clouds predicted.)
Good luck to everyone else that is attempting to see it.
John
The weather forecast has improved slightly here in Hamilton, Ontario. It was predicting rain... now it says it will be partly cloudy. I'm hoping it continues to improve.
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I had hoped to travel to Texas (I'm a member of the Planetary Society, and they're having a big do at a location there), or at least Niagara Falls, ON (specifically Niagara-on-the-Lake), but my wife is completely uninterested. Will have to make do with the partial here in Mississauga, or watch online. Forecast for Mississauga right now is a mix of sun and cloud.
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I'm headed to Texas with a Celestron 6SE plus sun filter. No photography, though, just observation. I have a pair of eclipse glasses for which this will be their 4th eclipse.
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I had hoped to travel to Texas (I'm a member of the Planetary Society, and they're having a big do at a location there), or at least Niagara Falls, ON (specifically Niagara-on-the-Lake), but my wife is completely uninterested. Will have to make do with the partial here in Mississauga, or watch online. Forecast for Mississauga right now is a mix of sun and cloud.
We got a last-minute hotel stay in Niagara Falls (Canada) on Monday night, and _not_ for the 4x they're charging (for Sunday night?). So we are now planning to go early Monday, watch the eclipse, and then stay overnight. I am really looking forward to this, seeing an eclipse has been on my bucket list for a long time.
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I decided to plug my telescope in to test it and discovered that it isn't slewing left or right, just up and down. I should be able to work with that, but it's annoying because I've probably only used it half a dozen times since I bought it. It has spent most of it's life on a shelf in my storage room.
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Traveled to Texas to join an event hosted by alma mater’s space physics department. Currently the weather is pretty bad and looks pretty bad tomorrow. We’ll see. Would be content with a hazy view through breaks in the thicker stuff. The upside is that the location has real bathrooms.
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Well, the clouds cleared enough to see the eclipse here, but my telescope skills failed me.
I did manage to get one decent image with my DSLR, though.
(https://apollohoax.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/IMG_5305-scaled-e1712611278588.jpg)
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Traveled to Texas to join an event hosted by alma mater’s space physics department. Currently the weather is pretty bad and looks pretty bad tomorrow. We’ll see. Would be content with a hazy view through breaks in the thicker stuff. The upside is that the location has real bathrooms.
Always the mark of civilisation. It's nice to know the USA is occasionally up to that mark. ;)
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How was it in Texas? I want to see if 'The Curse of Bob' still holds.
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Saw it in Niagara Falls, ON. Overcast, but it did peek through from time to time. Did not see the corona, but did catch a glimpse of the "diamond ring" just at the end of totality. Totality was something else, it was _nighttime_.
My brother (who lives in Germany) says I should travel to Spain for the 2026 one there :-)
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I should travel to Spain for the 2026 one there :-)
I bet clear skies are pretty much guaranteed in Spain.
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I should travel to Spain for the 2026 one there :-)
I bet clear skies are pretty much guaranteed in Spain.
I hear the rain in Spain falls mostly on the plain. Or so it is ... sung.
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I caught a brief view of a partial through a hole in the clouds for a few seconds in San Antonio, but it went away before I could get a photo.
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I was at Belton Lake in Texas. Like the folks in San Antonio, I was leery about the cloud cover (50-70%). But we had a clear patch at the right time and had some great viewing.
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We drove in to Liberty Hill just north of Austin; while our house was technically in the zone of totality, we'd only get like 11 seconds or so. Clouds were problematic right up until totality, and then the sky cleared like magic. Got some extremely bad cell phone pics, but no pictures can do it justice anyway.
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Was close to the edge of any kind of shadow at all, being in the Pacific North West, and even if it wasn't, it was completely overcast, so no dice here, I'm afraid.
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There's a video on YT mapping total eclipses for the next 20 years around the world. South-east Australia (where I am) gets a pair in 2028 and 2030.
Perhaps I can see about putting out the welcome mat...
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There's a video on YT mapping total eclipses for the next 20 years around the world. South-east Australia (where I am) gets a pair in 2028 and 2030.
Perhaps I can see about putting out the welcome mat...
The welcome mat would be great! My wife and I can meet you where ever. (Compared to our trip from the United States to Australia, a few hundred kilometers one way or another won't make a difference.)
Do you know what the Moon phase will be? ;) I would like to see the stars in the southern hemisphere, too!
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The moon phase at a total solar eclipse?
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We didn't see any stars at totality. Venus and Jupiter were visible, but that's it.
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The moon phase at a total solar eclipse?
;D ;D ;D ;D