The Great American Eclipse
8 years ago in #life by winstonwolfe (71)
$15.22
- Past Payouts $15.22
- - Author $12.65
- - Curators $2.57
157 votes
- ned: $7.94
- val-b: $2.02
- nanzo-scoop: $0.43
- slowwalker: $0.41
- lafona-miner: $0.36
- kevinwong: $0.34
- leesunmoo: $0.33
- au1nethyb1: $0.32
- wang: $0.26
- delegate.lafona: $0.19
- thecryptofiend: $0.17
- xeroc: $0.15
- barrie: $0.11
- anotherjoe: $0.11
- good-karma: $0.11
- sonzweil: $0.09
- jrcornel: $0.09
- rossco99: $0.09
- vip: $0.09
- opheliafu: $0.08
- and 137 more
Poor man's filter:
Pile several of this together!
It's an impressive thing to see! I left the taking of photos to others and just concentrated on seeing what was happening.
Yeah, I'm gonna totally be that guy with a couple of cameras going at the same time. One with a larger telephoto mirror lens with mylar over it to fill as much of the frame as possible, and another with a wider-angle lens to capture the full sky and maybe some landscape below during the whole process.
Also, this reply makes for my 1,900th post. :D
Looks like we get a nice view of it here in Panama as well.
Why the Sun and moon was moving west to east not East to West?
https://steemit.com/eclipse/@bonapathy/eclipse-2017-there-has-to-be-an-invisible-sun
They didn't, and that's a ridiculous assertion. The moon's trip around the earth is a lot longer than the sun's. They were both racing each other west, and the sun surpassed the moon. So it looked like the moon was moving east. It's a case of "which train is moving?"