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#eclipse2024

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This composite image of seventeen images shows the progression of a total solar eclipse at the NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio on Monday, April 8, 2024. A total solar eclipse swept across a narrow portion of the North American continent fr ☀️🌑

#Cleveland #Composite #Eclipse #Eclipse2024 #Moon #NASA/GRC/JordanSalkin #NASAGlennResearchCenter #Sun

▶️ 1 new picture from NASA (Image Library) commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fil

It took me awhile to figure out the orientation of this photo: North is on the left side of the image.

Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island are at the top, and Quebec is at the bottom. (The narrow body of water poking in from the left foreground is the St Lawrence River.) New Brunswick and Maine are in darkness.

#eclipse2024 #SolarEclipse2024 #Maine #NewBrunswick #ISS

techhub.social/@linuxgal/11226

TechHub🌈 ☯️Teresita🐧👭 (@linuxgal@techhub.social)Attached: 1 image The #eclipse from the #ISS

No, you didn't see a #solarflare during the total #eclipse2024 — but you may have seen something just as special
Several media outlets have incorrectly claimed that explosive solar flares were spotted during the April 8 total solar #eclipse. But there were no flares during totality, so what did people see?
"the bright feature seen by millions was actually a prominence. These are longer-lived plasma structures, and not explosive like flares."
livescience.com/space/the-sun/

I've finally started to sort out the eclipse photos from my big camera. This came just a few seconds after my diamond ring photo, so let's call this a ruby ring.

I'm not completely sure what's going on here to create the red color. I think the red is from the Sun's chromosphere. Then maybe the red is being refracted then scattered a bit by the high cloud cover we had during totality. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

April 8, 2024. Van Wert, Ohio.