(via weareallstarstuff)
Solar eclipse taken with Canon EOS XS, 4.5” dobsonian, baader solar filter.
(Source: anndruyan, via astrotastic)
Solar eclipse projected through the ‘pinholes’, made by oak leaves, on my shed door.
The tiny gaps between each leaf act as individual pinhole cameras, morphing the shadows of the tree with projections of the obscured sun. Next eclipse, you can witness this yourself, or even replicate it by crossing your fingers over on another in a waffle patter.
Ok. Maybe this one is my favorite.
I walked down to a nearby park to watch the eclipse. It was really beautiful… I don’t think I’ve never seen a solar eclipse before. I’m so glad I went… being able to take these photos was just a bonus.
It was amazingly hard to get a good picture. Putting the eclipse-glasses in front of the camera just made it too dark and require seconds of exposure time, and my hands aren’t nearly steady enough for that. But without it, it completely filled the image with glare.
I ended up getting the best pictures by waiting for the eclipse to hide behind a cloud. Then I used 1/1600th s. exposure time, the lowest ISO, and the highest F-stop, to try to limit the light as much as possible. I had to manually focus too, since the autofocus totally failed — not surprising for something millions of kilometers away XD
I think they turned out pretty, at least! I didn’t expect to get something decent without using a filter.
(ed: It’s in the EXIF, but the camera’s a PowerShot A570 IS)
Wow! These are really great! :D
(Source: fioraaeterna)
Coincidental Solar Eclipse?
There will be an annular solar eclipse taking place this evening (currently in progress) viewable from the western parts of the US and eastern Asia.
This is what happens when the Moon blocks some of the light from the Sun by passing in front of it from our vantage point on Earth. It is an annular eclipse and not a total eclipse because the Moon won’t completely cover up the Sun in the sky as it does during a total solar eclipse. Solar eclipses happen in these two varieties because the distance from the Earth to the Moon varies during its orbit around Earth. Therefore, the apparent size of the Moon looks different depending on how close the Moon is to Earth, and will only cover up as much of the Sun as it can. In fact, the Moon happens to be near its furthest point now.
It is interesting to note how close the Moon comes to completely covering up the Sun, and how this depends on the geometry of the situation.
During a total solar eclipse, the Moon will cover up the Sun almost exactly without much overlap. This happens because the apparent size of the Moon as viewed from Earth is nearly the same as the apparent size of the Sun as viewed from Earth.
This can be measured by comparing the ratio of the Sun’s radius and its distance to Earth to the ratios of the Moon’s radius and its distance to Earth. According to my own calculations they only differ by factor of about 3% of the Moon ratio. This is justified since the the Moon happens to be 400 times smaller than the Sun, but is about 400 times closer. Bigger differences in these ratios would imply that the Moon looks smaller or larger than the Sun during an eclipse. This closeness is equivalent to the claim that the two right triangles drawn in this diagram are close to being similar.
Is there any physical reason for why these ratios are the way they are? It seems plausible that the Moon could have had a different size, and orbited a little closer or further away from Earth thereby preventing such a ‘perfect’ total eclipse from happening. The configurations we witness almost seem like some coincidence!So what? Is there any value to this special orientation during an eclipse?
Actually, the perfect total eclipses we are lucky enough to experience are valuable opportunities for astronomical observation.
In 1919, Arthur Eddington observed a total solar eclipse and was able to experimentally verify the phenomenon of gravitational lensing—one of the theoretical predictions of general relativity, which involved the bending of distant star light due to the Sun’s gravity. In addition, these perfect total eclipses also allow for other observations of solar phenomenon.
If it were not for this ecliptic coincidence and things were any different, then how much more difficult would it have been for scientists to learn about these other astrophysical phenomenon?
(via shychemist)
Partial Solar Eclipse tomorrow (Sunday, May 20)
6pm Mountain Time
Calgarians, get ready! :D





