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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.

spoopy, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life
@spoopy@lemmy.world avatar

Niagra falls City has preemptively declared a state of emergency because of how much of a shit show this eclipse is going to be

Graphy, (edited )

My wife works for the NPS and her old coworker invited us to help out with their eclipse event in Ohio. Apparently they’re already prepping to close all the parking lots and are real worried they won’t have enough rangers.

Green13, w [Eric Berger] Seeing this eclipse is probably the highest-reward, lowest-effort thing one can do in life

If you waited to start planning until now it’ll be the hardest thing you’ve ever done.

xpinchx,

Yep. Anyone reading this that was planning on driving home right after - do yourself a favor and find a place nearby to stay the night.

Last time my 4 hour drive out was 17 hours back home. Gas stations out of gas, no bathrooms, bumper to bumper the whole way.

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

How the heck am I going to get there without putting in any effort?

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

I live in the path of totality and I’m already tired of hearing about it.

Letstakealook,

Agreed. I’m not looking forward to it either. I’ll be at work, most people are probably going to call in, and there will be hours of traffic when get off.

Rolder,

Best chance I’ll ever have personally. Live in the path, work from home, good time. Plan is to just step outside for a bit, look at it (with protection) then back to work.

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

Wanted to but the flight prices were too much

Daxtron2, w Event Horizon Telescope reveals magnetic fields around the Milky Way’s central black hole - NASASpaceFlight.com

I can’t get over how fucking cool these pictures are and how they keep getting better and better.

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

Make sure you cross post to !solareclipse ( reddthat.com/c/solareclipse ). We can’t wait!

maculata, w Daily Telescope: Peering into the remnants of an 800-year-old supernova

Cosmic sphincter

WWJD, w Stunning James Webb images show birth and death of massive stars

Janus coming for us

huginn, w Stunning James Webb images show birth and death of massive stars

I wish they had links to the full res in the article. Annoying to have a “stunning image” but it’s only a 1080x1080 jpg

chalk46, w Stunning James Webb images show birth and death of massive stars

If it's not seen as much, that probably means the green material is heavier than iron. It's less common, but large enough stars can fuse even heavier elements. That's where all those elements on Earth came from in the first place.

lordmauve, w A Mysterious Impact Left 2 Billion Craters On The Surface of Mars

Real scientists would say two gigacraters.

xantoxis, w A Mysterious Impact Left 2 Billion Craters On The Surface of Mars

~ Mysterious ~

I guess it’s true that we don’t know exactly what kind of rock hit the planet and created 2 billion craters from ejecta.

On the other hand, that makes every impact on every planet ~ mysterious ~

clickbaity.

Thorry84,

In true clickbait fashion the article then goes on to describe in detail said mysterious thing. Almost like it isn’t mysterious at all.

MeDuViNoX,
@MeDuViNoX@sh.itjust.works avatar

Thank you for teaching me how to type ~ in the small. ~

Shdwdrgn, w Northern lights predicted in US and UK on Monday night in wake of solar storms

But the solar flare was yesterday, if there was going to be any good viewing of auroras it would have been last night, or more likely a couple nights ago (from US time zones). The peak of it occurred shortly after lunch yesterday and it’s calmed down back to normal today.

mihnt,

I mean, these are highly funded government agencies reporting this from both sides of the planet. You know something they don’t?

Shdwdrgn,

The agencies were correct about the information, however unlike OP apparently I know how to adjust for time zone differences. Monday morning in Australia is still Sunday in the US, so yes that would have been the correct time for the warning. But this article was posted here a day after the event occurred, all of the warnings expired, and the Kp index had dropped back down to more moderate levels. At the peak of the event the Kp index reached around 8.0. When I posted my comment yesterday it was sitting at 1.66, well below the threshold for seeing auroras anywhere in the continental US. If you had any chance of seeing auroras here it would have had to be Sunday night, not Monday night.

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