astronomy

Magazyn ze zdalnego serwera może być niekompletny. Zobacz więcej na oryginalnej instancji.

prole, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life

It’ll be interesting to see just how little this is in the national news given the location of the path compared to times when the path of an eclipse has gone through major metropolitan areas in the northeast or west coast. Almost an indirect measurement of science education in each area. I didn’t even know there was an eclipse coming until this article.

Or maybe I’ll be proven wrong…

XeroxCool,

That sounds more like a normal population density representation. Everyone hears about CA or NY news because they have more significant national and global impacts, through number of affected people and volume of business. News about the state of Arkansas is less visible since it has less population than any of the major cities in the aforementioned states.

Despite that, I’ve seen plenty of coverage specifically because, compared to the 2017 American total solar eclipse, this one is more accessible to a vastly greater population: namely DFW TX and NYC. NYC has a longer drive, but the northeast is an incredibly dense portion of the country.

exocrinous, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life

No, it’s really hard to go to America.

DudeImMacGyver, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life
@DudeImMacGyver@sh.itjust.works avatar

Low effort if you live in that little strip I guess

ShepherdPie,

That’s how it was for me in 2017. The path of totality went right over my house. I took the day off and strolled out to my back yard to watch it. We also smoked some meat and invited people over for a party, which was the most effort in the whole situation.

Fenrisulfir, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life

Nuhuh. I tried planning a trip a month ago and everything was sold out and airfare was astronomical. I’m gonna plan a trip for the Spanish one in 2026 a year early

lolcatnip, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life

Y’all, the article is obviously written for people in the path of totality. You’re not being clever complaining about the cost and hassle of traveling.

Blackmist, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life

I actually looked up when the next total eclipse passes over my house, and the good news is I’ve only got to live to be about 170 years old.

RememberTheApollo_, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life

I can imagine the traffic jams anywhere along the path of totality. It’s gonna be a mess. We already booked a place in the path, but it’s in the sticks and I’m not looking forward to the lengthy drive back to civilization.

givesomefucks, w Powerful X-class solar flare slams Earth, triggering radio blackout over the Pacific Ocean

The abundance of back-to-back solar events has led scientists to think the sun may have entered its explosive era of peak activity, known as solar maximum — which seems to be starting a year earlier than previous forecasts predicted. However, researchers will have to wait until the sun “calms down” to know for sure.

What we do know is that X-class flares are most common during solar maximum, which is part of the sun’s 11-year solar cycle. So far in 2024, seven X-class flares, including the latest one, have burst from the sun, which is already half the number that reached Earth in 2023, Live Science previously reported.

On a long enough timescale, we’re gonna be hit by a big one.

I remember like a decade ago they were saying it hits a developed area, it’ll blow out all the transformers, and on that scale no country could replace them all for a very long time.

Australis13,

I agree. There were articles and documentaries about 20 years ago that I remember featuring these sort of events. The continent affected would take 20-30 years to rebuild its electricity grid.

givesomefucks,

I’ll just never get over how “we” (science I guess) know that stuff like this isn’t a question of if, but when.

And we just don’t seem to get ready for it.

Like, Y2K we saw coming and everyone handled it in time. But if there’s no firm date on something, everyone with the power to do anything just ignores it.

As a society it just feels like we’re living paycheck to paycheck. Can’t worry about next year cuz rents due in two weeks shit.

It’s just not a good way to go about things.

Australis13,

In general, people are appallingly bad at weighing up long-term vs short-term stuff, both in terms of risks and benefits. It's even worse when, as you say, there's no definite deadline or it doesn't directly affect those who can do something about it.

Rolder,

“No electricity” definitely sounds like an “everyone” problem lol

deafboy,
@deafboy@lemmy.world avatar

If it’s an EVERYONE problem, clearly SOMBODY is doing something, so I can safely ignore it. /s

slazer2au,

What you didn’t see was the guy who made the problem in the 60s warn everyone about it from the 70s onward until his retirement in the 90s, then everyone say oh shit, he is right.

sploosh,
givesomefucks,

Yes, we get hit by them all the time…

What everyone else is talking about is a big one.

sploosh,

The Carrington event was a big one. It is estimated to have been an X40 flare. This article is about an X1.1 flare. Telegraph poles caught fire. The auroras were so bright people woke up and started making breakfast even though it was the middle of the night. They were visible as far south as central Mexico! If we got hit by a Carrington scale flare today we would be repairing the power grid for the next half century.

Rolder,

I believe it’s possible to avoid if the proper protocols are in place. Namely, the grid has to be turned off completely before the flare hits and then things will mostly be fine. Just wonder how well we can predict these events.

Australis13,

My understanding is that we actually don't have much of a warning (under an hour), since a CME has to reach the satellite at the Lagrange point between Earth and the Sun for us to know it's about to hit Earth. According to the article below, this includes power companies, but I remain skeptical that there's enough organisation in place to shut down the North American, European or Asian grids in 15 minutes.

https://www.space.com/coronal-mass-ejections-cme

LimpRimble, w See photos of NASA's suitcase-sized rovers that will soon map the moon's surface
@LimpRimble@lemmy.ca avatar

Did I miss something? I couldn’t see where they said “will soon” and what that means.

Muscar,

“In early March, NASA announced that construction and testing of the three CADRE rovers was complete and the trio was ready for integration with Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C lander, which will deliver the mini explorers to the lunar surface later this year or early next year as part of the company’s third lunar lander mission, IM-3.”

At the end of the article. And here’s the website for the project with more info: www.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/cadre

LimpRimble,
@LimpRimble@lemmy.ca avatar

Perfect, thanks.

Grass, w Powerful X-class solar flare slams Earth, triggering radio blackout over the Pacific Ocean

Fucking enough “slams” in headlines!!!¹¹11one. /s

HootinNHollerin, (edited ) w Chinese space junk falls to Earth over Southern California, creating spectacular fireball (photos, video)

Oh damn wish I knew and could’ve watched it. Also a bit unnerving

crazyminner, w The world's largest digital camera is ready to investigate the dark universe

Finally I’ll get a wallpaper big enough to fit on all my monitors.

ivanafterall, w Rainbow-like pattern found on planet outside solar system

Yeah, look directly at the giant flesh space eyeball, smart.

AbouBenAdhem, (edited ) w Rainbow-like pattern found on planet outside solar system

I assume we can’t actually resolve spatial detail on the planet, so the effect must have been temporal. Would it have been something like a spike moving through the visible spectrum as the planet transits its star?

Thcdenton, w Rainbow-like pattern found on planet outside solar system
  • Wszystkie
  • Subskrybowane
  • Moderowane
  • Ulubione
  • astronomy@mander.xyz
  • fediversum
  • rowery
  • test1
  • Spoleczenstwo
  • lieratura
  • muzyka
  • sport
  • Blogi
  • Technologia
  • Pozytywnie
  • nauka
  • FromSilesiaToPolesia
  • motoryzacja
  • niusy
  • slask
  • informasi
  • Gaming
  • esport
  • Psychologia
  • tech
  • giereczkowo
  • ERP
  • krakow
  • antywykop
  • Cyfryzacja
  • zebynieucieklo
  • kino
  • warnersteve
  • Wszystkie magazyny