The LAST Eclipse in History

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  • Опубликовано: 20 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja Год назад +3744

    Having seen 95%ish partial eclipse, I can attest that the sky _absolutely_ gets dark in that weird way where it’s dark like at dusk or dawn but the light is still blue-dominated instead of the reddish hues of sunrise and sunset. The best comparison I’ve heard for it was a “day for night” filter, except in real life.

    • @ajs1998
      @ajs1998 Год назад +1

      If you haven't seen a total eclipse it really is something else. The difference between 99% and 100% is almost literally night and day.

    • @jpmissdeNice
      @jpmissdeNice Год назад +196

      Nothing compares a total solar eclipse even a 99% partial eclipse.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +63

      @@jpmissdeNice
      Of course, there are absolutely some experiences that are unique to total eclipses, such as the diamond ring effect (95% isn’t enough for that).

    • @timmccarthy9917
      @timmccarthy9917 Год назад +64

      Confirmed the "day for night" filter is accurate. It's like being on a different planet with a way weaker star.

    • @ClosestNearUtopia
      @ClosestNearUtopia Год назад +19

      Next time look at the shadows and see them become bow shaped.

  • @khazza930
    @khazza930 Год назад +1822

    I would argue that now IS the golden age for solar eclipses!
    52% annular vs 48% full implies to me that the average distance of eclipses (or the Earth-to-moon vs Earth-to-sun distance ratio) is just right for the moon to cover the sun but not the corona.
    The moon being closer would of course give us more full eclipses, but a moon too close that it also blocks hide the corona would also be disappointing

    • @rahul9704
      @rahul9704 Год назад +183

      I wanted to comment this. The moon is 400 times smaller than the sun, but by sheer coincidence, It's also 400 times closer. That is why they appear around the same size, and why total solar eclipses happen how they do. This truly is the golden age for such a thing.

    • @rahul9704
      @rahul9704 Год назад +145

      @@Redwan777
      Radius of the sun: 696340km
      Radius of the moon: 1737km
      Rs/Rm = ~400.89
      Avg distance of the sun: 147M km
      Avg distance of the moon: 384k km
      Avg Ds/Dm = ~383.12
      I wasn't making those numbers up.

    • @Filmtense
      @Filmtense Год назад +16

      @@rahul9704💅💅💅

    • @Redwan777
      @Redwan777 Год назад +42

      @@rahul9704 I see you are right. I have known the incorrect radius of sun.

    • @SixDigitOsu
      @SixDigitOsu Год назад +5

      berserk reference!!! 11!!1

  • @Skip6235
    @Skip6235 Год назад +925

    I really wish the media did a better job at explaining to the general public about the difference between a total and annular eclipse, and also that the path of totality is narrow. I went down to St Louis for the 2018 eclipse and it was one of the most incredible experiences of my life, but then I had a lot of conversations with people afterwards who were not at totality like “I don’t see what the big deal was”

    • @Firebal_
      @Firebal_ Год назад +34

      I am lucky enough to live in the path of totality of the 2018 eclipse, and it was one of the coolest things that I have ever seen in my life! I could see the sun cast a partial shadow on the ground where you could see crescents all over the ground before and after totality.
      Not too relevant to your comment but I still wanted to say it because eclipses are cool

    • @Norsilca
      @Norsilca Год назад +44

      I didn't get "I don't see what the big deal is", I got "Oh yeah, I saw it too" when they were hundreds of miles from the totality. I'm not sure how many of them understood the huge difference.

    • @NF30
      @NF30 Год назад +18

      Wasn't it 2017-08-21? It was partial where I live, and the sunlight was slightly oranger than usual, so that was kind of cool. Hoping to see totality in April!

    • @topapo3661
      @topapo3661 Год назад +32

      yeah i remember my mother saying “oh we will see 92% from where we live its close enough” but i somehow convinced my parents to drive us far enough to see totality. it was 100% worth it

    • @chrissolace
      @chrissolace Год назад +15

      I had like a 90-99% partial eclipse and it was honestly really cool watching it at school in the field. But since it wasn’t “total”, it didn’t get as dark as night and afterwards, a lot of people were just saying “that’s it”? But I don’t know how often you’d get a chance to see it in your life… especially now knowing there will be less and less…

  • @sleepy2702
    @sleepy2702 11 месяцев назад +572

    I hold such a grudge against my school for forcing us to stay inside during the total solar eclipse. I was in a room with a window facing a wall so there was no way to see it... the school had essentially banned us from looking because you're technically not meant to look at the sun. What made it more frustrating is that a couple younger classes teachers got those special glasses for everyone so they all got to see it while we didn't, there was a couple extra so two people from my class with special needs were let to see it too (which I mean, I get they have a hard time but still feels really unfair). I was so pissed off that all of my family, thousands if not millions of people and kids in my school too young to even remember it were all going on about how amazing it was while I was forced to just... stare at a wall. I don't think I'll ever get the chance to see one again, my school and teachers robbed me of a once in a lifetime experience :(
    Edit: I won't be able to travel to see it, I'm in Scotland so a trip to America would be quite far. I'm in uni at the moment so I don't have much money and I'm busy basically all year, I can't really travel much at all except for a week or two in the summer with my family.

    • @cranksetwrench
      @cranksetwrench 11 месяцев назад +33

      There’s another one coming on April 8 2024 in the states of Texas, southeast Oklahoma, Arkansas southeastern Missouri, southern Illinois, far western Kentucky, Indiana, ohio, far western New York etc

    • @BC3R
      @BC3R 11 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@cranksetwrenchme in Virginia 😢

    • @trueriver1950
      @trueriver1950 11 месяцев назад +9

      If you really want to see one that badly you'll be travelling to TX just after Easter. Don't bear a grudge, sort it.

    • @Murglie
      @Murglie 11 месяцев назад +28

      There will be one in Spain in 2026. Still a bit of a travel, but definitely much closer than the US.

    • @Memzys
      @Memzys 10 месяцев назад +67

      @@trueriver1950 then they are wasting time effort and money on something they couldve easily seen for free. they have every right to be upset

  • @otsokivivuori7726
    @otsokivivuori7726 Год назад +277

    One weird consequence of even partial solar eclipses for a very niche group of people is that thermal air currents get weaker. One time at a gliding competition the comp meteorologist casually mentioned during morning briefing that the day was going to have a partial solar eclipse (maybe around 50%, cant remember exactly) and to watch out for weaker thermals. I didn't fly, I was there as an assistant, but when the pilots came back from their flights they did say it was a noticeable drop in performance.

    • @dahawk8574
      @dahawk8574 Год назад +7

      Noticeable weaker for the solar powered planes too.

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Год назад +9

      That's such an _obscure_ reference

    • @suedenim9208
      @suedenim9208 11 месяцев назад

      @@YounesLayachi That's such a subtle reference. Here's an (insufficient) 3rd upvote.

  • @yeldarb300
    @yeldarb300 8 месяцев назад +14

    Checking in from the 2024 American Eclipse. I bought eclipse glasses, solar filters, and a telescope (with a filter) leading up to it. Drove over 1000 miles to reach a clear spot in totality. I don’t think I’ll ever see anything more impressive than that eclipse in my life. No photo does it justice.

  • @williamwilson6499
    @williamwilson6499 Год назад +107

    I watched the total eclipse of 2017 while sitting on my motorcycle in a hotel parking lot at Grand Island, Nebraska.
    Can’t describe the feelings accurately in words…I was in complete awe. Seeing the corona was spectacular.
    Hope to see the next one in April.

    • @VincentVanJoYT
      @VincentVanJoYT Год назад +1

      thats badass

    • @WasabiPancakess
      @WasabiPancakess 11 месяцев назад +1

      was in hastings nebraska at the time in 6th grade. it was phenomenal

  • @Ryan.Matlock
    @Ryan.Matlock Год назад +797

    I was skeptical of how cool seeing a total solar eclipse would be until I actually saw one. It wasn't mystical or spiritual or anything, but it was a singularly interesting and unusual experience. If you have the opportunity, definitely go see it!

    • @Spo8
      @Spo8 Год назад +61

      And to anyone who thinks "why drive to see a total eclipse if I'm close enough to see 95% or 99%," trust me when I say it's a world of difference. It's so insanely cool and probably the most striking natural thing I've ever seen in my life.

    • @1three7
      @1three7 Год назад +24

      I absolutely agree, except I'd say it very much is spiritual. I don't follow any organized religion, but I think it's a pretty miraculous thing that the only thing we know of that holds life also has something as beautiful and unlikely as our eclipses. Witnessing it and experiencing all the sensory aspects of one throws you into a mindset where you are forced to reckon with our place in the universe.
      I love science and physics. I'm not at all someone who discounts the insane amount of things we have understood and documented. But some things are inherently outside of the realm of scientific explanation. Something like an eclipse can be a slap in the face to wake you up to that fact.

    • @David280GG
      @David280GG Год назад +1

      If i live long enough

    • @brandonguild1666
      @brandonguild1666 Год назад +4

      If you live in the US there is one on April 4th and then none until 2045.

    • @Aaron067
      @Aaron067 Год назад +1

      I had the perfect time & opportunity to see one, but that day was completely cloudy lol, maybe another time if I live long enough

  • @miguelinileugim
    @miguelinileugim Год назад +231

    Petition to put boosters on the Moon for no particular reason.

    • @oberonpanopticon
      @oberonpanopticon 8 месяцев назад +16

      Just for funzies.

    • @dosdude1935
      @dosdude1935 8 месяцев назад +7

      POV: you have no idea how orbiting works

    • @MainmanPredonical
      @MainmanPredonical 8 месяцев назад +4

      Genius

    • @-Plube-
      @-Plube- 8 месяцев назад

      @@dosdude1935 pov: your brain is incapable of comprehending innovation.

    • @CheeZboi1234
      @CheeZboi1234 8 месяцев назад +5

      I say we put them on the backs DN propel it back to earth when it gets too far😂

  • @unnamedweirdo3804
    @unnamedweirdo3804 Год назад +190

    I live in Southern Illinois where we were in the point of longest duration for the eclipse in Augus 2017 and will be experiencing totality again this april. We are incredibly lucky to experience this phenomenon twice within such short period of time.

    • @50Steaks68
      @50Steaks68 Год назад +3

      So am I lol. We drove all the way down to Kentucky from Michigan (13 hrs) just to see that total solar eclipse. Now we get the treat of having a much longer one in Toledo.

    • @suedenim9208
      @suedenim9208 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@50Steaks68 I'm in NY, and could be in the center of totality 170 to 180 miles away, but that's in the Adirondacks in early spring. If the weather forecast is cooperative when it's close enough I'll probably drive there, but if I could I'd be headed for southern Texas because there's a much better chance of good weather and the extra minute of totality.

    • @GalacticTommy
      @GalacticTommy 10 месяцев назад

      That’s cool! Me and my family were also there at the point of longest duration. We didn’t really plan it out, we just put in the coordinates for the point of exact longest duration and drove there (we figured it would be a random cornfield or something like that) and when we got there it was actually a vineyard who had a whole event set up for it so there was tons of parking and there was a cool sculpture at the exact point of longest duration. Lucked out pretty well. Loved the experience!

    • @BentleyCreates
      @BentleyCreates 10 месяцев назад +1

      Going to Niagara falls for it 🔥🔥🔥🔥

    • @coulie27
      @coulie27 8 месяцев назад +2

      I'm at a frustrating 10+ hr drive from each one. Just far enough to make it not worth it, but close enough where I could do it if I really wanted to. Could fly I guess, either way would spend hundreds and lose a couple days for a 4 minute experience. If it were half the distance would be a much easier call.

  • @shrekwizowskee2910
    @shrekwizowskee2910 Год назад +105

    No way. The line of totality of that april 8th solar eclipse goes RIGHT BY my home town. I could definitly go see it, especially seeing that the next one that is even close to being that close to me is in 2106

    • @surc_
      @surc_ Год назад +2

      Do it! I’m certain it’ll be worth it 😄

    • @onorebakasama
      @onorebakasama Год назад +4

      GO SEE IT. I travelled to go see the 2017 total solar eclipse and it was SO worth it!

    • @suedenim9208
      @suedenim9208 11 месяцев назад +2

      I'll play contrarian. Consider not going making plans to go home if it's in a place where there's a good chance of bad weather. I can drive 4 hours to the Adirondacks , but because there's a very good chance of crappy weather I'm not going to make any special plans for it. If the weather forecast is good a few days out I can just drive up without any special plans in advance.

    • @TheRogueX
      @TheRogueX 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah, I can drive an hour or so and be right in the path of totality

    • @vjkanaparthy273
      @vjkanaparthy273 8 месяцев назад +1

      its outside my window lol
      jesus is coming.

  • @pamelas1002
    @pamelas1002 Год назад +190

    59 years old, and this is the first time I understand what an eclipse is! Thank you!

    • @Ostensibly_Mellow
      @Ostensibly_Mellow Год назад +47

      That definitely says something about the state of education. That's not a dig at you or your intelligence, more an admonishment of the time wasted on nonsense in schools...

    • @kennarajora6532
      @kennarajora6532 Год назад +9

      Well, there's also lunar eclipses. I think this guy also made a video about that too, you should go check it out.

    • @tengonadacluewhatsgutsprec1419
      @tengonadacluewhatsgutsprec1419 Год назад +3

      ​@kennarajora6532 I've had the blessed fortune to see an annular solar as well as a lunar, lunar was the most wowza to witness! Interested to see how it compares to seeing a total solar =D

    • @talkofchrist
      @talkofchrist Год назад

      ​@@tengonadacluewhatsgutsprec1419having seen all three, I'm excited for you to see the total solar eclipse. It completely blows the other two out of the water and is one of the most amazing and beautiful things to see in life. But it has to be a 100% total eclipse.

    • @Quantum-Bullet
      @Quantum-Bullet Год назад

      @@Ostensibly_Mellowor going out there and searching it yourself, Wikipedia and RUclips will do.

  • @TheHonoredSoldier
    @TheHonoredSoldier Год назад +236

    Was just watching some of your other videos. You have inspired me to consider becoming a physicist as a career. Thank you for doing what you do!!!

    • @yomammasaurusrex9571
      @yomammasaurusrex9571 Год назад +11

      Inspired to consider? That doesn't really seem like much of anything if you think about it.

    • @rickzegooene
      @rickzegooene Год назад +14

      @@yomammasaurusrex9571 Makes sense, because there are many hurdles you have to go through to become a professional physicist. It takes 8+ years of higher education to become fully qualified. You will have time to consider your future prospects, and if at some point you decide to switch careers, your degrees are still useful to you and won't go to waste.

    • @yomammasaurusrex9571
      @yomammasaurusrex9571 Год назад +1

      @@rickzegooene no

    • @rickzegooene
      @rickzegooene Год назад +1

      @@yomammasaurusrex9571 no what

    • @QuantumHistorian
      @QuantumHistorian Год назад +1

      @@rickzegooene No he doesn't want to do any thinking what so ever I guess lol. As for the OP, Physics is huge fun to study up to master's level, but doing a PhD and having a career in it is pretty terrible for a wide variety of reasons.

  • @krussiadad2145
    @krussiadad2145 8 месяцев назад +5

    I can attest to the statement that the difference between 99% and 100% totality is literally the difference between day and night. Having seen the totality for 2.5 minutes, it is ethereally beautiful! I encourage you to see it once in your life!

    • @fromnorway643
      @fromnorway643 8 месяцев назад

      A 99% eclipse here on Earth is almost as bright as normal daylight on _Saturn._

    • @wiirambo7437
      @wiirambo7437 4 месяца назад

      Yeah this is because the sun is so insane bright that dimming it to something like 0.01% is still brighter than other things we consider bright e.g. fire, flashlights, lightbulbs etc.

  • @virakchhang
    @virakchhang 8 месяцев назад +19

    Just got back from a 800 mile journey by car to see the total eclipse. Worth it.

    • @monica012077
      @monica012077 8 месяцев назад +1

      620 and it was worth being in the path of totality.

    • @ShortFuseMan
      @ShortFuseMan 8 месяцев назад +3

      Duluth MN to Carbondale IL ❲769 miles❳ for me. The 4 minutes and 9 seconds of totality were worth every second to experience. Never could I have ever imagined that total solar eclipses could be so astonishing and breathtaking.

    • @ShortFuseMan
      @ShortFuseMan 8 месяцев назад +2

      Duluth MN to Carbondale IL ❲769 miles❳ for me. The 4 minutes and 9 seconds of totality were worth every second to experience. Never could I have ever imagined that total solar eclipses could be so astonishing and breathtaking.

    • @schneemann-fy6gi
      @schneemann-fy6gi 7 месяцев назад +2

      1175
      After a 4 hour flight

  • @Davtwan
    @Davtwan Год назад +37

    I once experienced being near an almost total eclipse. Everything looked like it had static. When I stepped outside, it was like the world had a CRT filter. Bizarre.

  • @Welowas
    @Welowas Год назад +161

    Next total solar eclipse in Germany is in 2084, I don't think I wanna wait that long so I already booked a plane to Canada to view this next total solar eclipse you mentioned! :)

    • @Eric-xh9ee
      @Eric-xh9ee Год назад +1

      Nice! Where about in Canada? If you are in Quebec, I'd recommend going to Old Quebec. It's really beautiful and peaceful

    • @talkofchrist
      @talkofchrist Год назад +3

      Make sure you get to a place of complete totality. It's totally worth it. We flew to Argentina to see one.

    • @JoJoModding
      @JoJoModding Год назад +4

      Just go to Spain in a few years.

    • @squeaksquawk4255
      @squeaksquawk4255 Год назад +8

      There's one in Spain in 2026 and 2027, if you want? One right down on the south coast, one cutting across from the north to the east coast

    • @MrT------5743
      @MrT------5743 Год назад +2

      Hopefully no clouds.

  • @DarkAlkaiser
    @DarkAlkaiser Год назад +7

    All of this reality must be denied to think the Earth is flat.

  • @JerusalemStrayCat
    @JerusalemStrayCat Год назад +65

    I went to Nashville in 2017 to see the most recent solar eclipse visible in much of North America, and I'm planning on going to Montreal in 2024 to see the next one. I feel so lucky to be able to see two total solar eclipses in my lifetime, so close together!

    • @cannadaddoit7460
      @cannadaddoit7460 Год назад +2

      I was in Kentucky for the 17 eclipse too. Drove from Michigan to watch it and then straight back home. 75 was packed and we sat in like 16 hours of concert traffic all the way back to the michigan border

    • @d_bud
      @d_bud Год назад

      I saw that one, too! I totally understand why people travel far and wide to experience it again and again.

    • @oscarinacan
      @oscarinacan Год назад

      The next one, April 8th, will be going through Southern il, Indiana, and Michigan. Why go so far north?

    • @d_bud
      @d_bud Год назад +1

      @@oscarinacanbecause Montreal is a cool place? Besides, we don’t know where he went from 😂

    • @cannadaddoit7460
      @cannadaddoit7460 Год назад

      @@d_bud Montreal sucks lol but so does michigan lol watch it in Indiana

  • @NandR
    @NandR Год назад +17

    Having seen the 2017 eclipse, it was amazing. I was stuck saying wow over and over. My camera overheated because my welder's glass just barely blocked the sunlight. I just saw the annular eclipse in October and it was cool but not anywhere as cool as the total eclipse. I had this primal fear worrying that the sun was gone and not coming back. It was always there, and then it just wasn't. I saw the stars, felt the "coolness" in the hot Georgia August air. Can't wait to go back to TX for the April eclipse.

  • @batterie1928
    @batterie1928 Год назад +62

    Love the art in this one ♡ the eclipse drawings are so cool. So glad minutephysics is back

  • @charliecharliewhiskey9403
    @charliecharliewhiskey9403 Год назад +7

    Still remember in 1999 when my father took me and my brother out of school, drove us to the south of England, so we could watch the total eclipse. Once in a lifetime event for me for sure.

    • @richardbloemenkamp8532
      @richardbloemenkamp8532 8 месяцев назад

      I saw this one too in Belgium. Fun but I would not travel a thousand km's for it.

  • @soulsbourne
    @soulsbourne 8 месяцев назад +17

    Dont be sad. A billion years from now, you should be more worried about sun's helium burning red giant phase evaporating oceans than the solar eclipse ...

    • @kashalethebear
      @kashalethebear 5 месяцев назад +1

      That won't happen even in 1 billion years. More like two or 3 billion.

    • @wiirambo7437
      @wiirambo7437 4 месяца назад

      @@kashalethebear It will take at least 4 billion years before the sun becomes a red giant. But there a 2 problems which may happen earlier (I just don't know when this happens, this may be already calculated and known).
      1. The moon may escape Earth's gravity andit will no longer keep Earth rotatiuon axis stable. (This would happen much later than the last total solar eclipse of curse)
      2. The sun slowly (over geological timescales) becomes hotter and there for brigther (since it has started fusion). It may boil away the Earth's ocean before it even becomes a red giant. This depends on how much the sun will heat up an stuff like the composition of earths atmosphere billions of years in the future.

  • @Painter99
    @Painter99 Год назад +77

    I got to see the eclipse in person this year! It was beautiful!

    • @Electifried
      @Electifried Год назад +1

      Did you see the annular eclipse in October, or the total eclipse back in April? I was lucky enough to see both :D

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 Год назад +1

      I brought my eclipse glasses to church and showed some people. Where I live, the moon got halfway across the sun (which is about 40% of the area). That was in October.

    • @atomictraveller
      @atomictraveller Год назад

      @@Electifriedwere you lucky enough to witness the west papuan genocide there too, or did you just look at the sky and hum whenever the screaming starts
      because it's fastantic to witless all kinda things up thar thar while the only competent people in the world are being slaughtered so you can buy plastix at the store

    • @SaladofStones
      @SaladofStones 10 месяцев назад

      Nice blog

    • @oberonpanopticon
      @oberonpanopticon 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@atomictravellerwhat

  • @d_bud
    @d_bud Год назад +25

    I was lucky enough to see the total solar eclipse in Oregon, US in August 2017. It was absolutely transforming experience. Highly recommend!

    • @bengoodwin2141
      @bengoodwin2141 Год назад +2

      Same here!

    • @Ken-fh4jc
      @Ken-fh4jc Год назад +1

      I live in PA it would have been a pretty far drive. The one in April I’ll be able to see from Erie, PA just a few hours away.

    • @MrClickity
      @MrClickity 11 месяцев назад

      I was a little too far north to get totality, but I still saw around 98% where I was at.
      It was still really neat but it never got noticeably dark outside (turns out, 2% of a lot of light is still a lot of light). Still looked pretty much like daylight, but much cooler, shadows had much sharper edges, and the light/colors had a weird quality to them that I can't quite describe.
      It almost felt like I had taken a very small dose of mushrooms. Not enough to fully trip, just enough to feel vaguely odd.

  • @arunpranav3085
    @arunpranav3085 Год назад +8

    sun - moon - earth --> solar eclipse
    sun - earth - moon --> lunar eclipse
    moon - sun - earth --> Apocalypse.

    • @imndatl
      @imndatl 10 дней назад

      Wdym Apocalypse?

  • @Squares2
    @Squares2 8 месяцев назад +16

    *cries in european*

    • @RandomPerson37233
      @RandomPerson37233 7 месяцев назад

      Same

    • @Squares2
      @Squares2 7 месяцев назад +3

      @chumbleisverychill817 r/whoooooosh

    • @B1-6911
      @B1-6911 7 месяцев назад +2

      *cheers in american*

    • @audervideos24816
      @audervideos24816 6 месяцев назад

      *cries in South America*

    • @loonaless
      @loonaless 6 месяцев назад

      Cries in phillippino

  • @mellow-jello
    @mellow-jello 8 месяцев назад +4

    You jinxed April 8 in 2024, only cloudy day of the week.

  • @TheOtherSteel
    @TheOtherSteel Год назад +3

    Amazing! Thank you for this video. Your style of communication makes the complex simple. Yours is the only RUclips channel I have binge watched from start to finish.

  • @MCcrepperify
    @MCcrepperify 8 месяцев назад +3

    assuming we dont just gently push the moon closer to the earth to keep it in earths orbit and not fly off into the void

  • @seraphik
    @seraphik Год назад +17

    I drove 6 hrs to watch the 2017 eclipse and it was the single most incredible thing I've seen. I wouldn't quite say it was a spiritual experience, but I understand why people say it is, because I think that's probably just the closest analogy you can make. The hairs on the back of my neck stood on end and I actually had tears in my eyes, for no reason I can readily explain. I'm not a handwavey new agey person. I'm STEM af. But maybe that's precisely why it was so momentous to me. It wasn't a supernatural phenomenon. It wasn't an act of god. It was, with no exaggeration, a miracle of nature. Next year I'm flying 6 hrs to watch it again, and I absolutely urge everyone to try to do the same. You won't regret it, and if you like in the US like me, you won't have another chance to watch it domestically until 2045.

    • @Vistico93
      @Vistico93 Год назад +3

      I know what you mean. Like, I knew in my head all it was was me standing in a shadow but I also knew it was a kind of shadow impossible to create otherwise. I mean, I can blot the sun out with my hand...but it's nowhere near the same :-) I hope both weather and circumstance cooperate that I may see another in 2024!

    • @csn583
      @csn583 Год назад +2

      *Looks at thumb* ...that's no moon...

  • @danc.5859
    @danc.5859 Год назад +2

    Viewing the eclipse that crossed North America in 2017 quite literally was a life changing experience. We saw it from the city of Weiser, Idaho, around 100 km NW of Boise. Though I've been interested in astronomy all of my life and have seen countless photos and videos of eclipses, it didn't prepare me for witnessing the real thing. It was absolutely overwhelming, and felt for all the world like some sort of special CGI effect was going on in the sky - it was so far outside the experience of what we see in everyday life that it was difficult to comprehend and accept as some kind of natural phenomenon.
    When we returned back to Boise after the event, of course the topic of conversation was the eclipse. So many people (by far the majority of the city) stayed in Boise to watch the eclipse, figuring that 99% totality was basically as good as the real thing, so they didn't make the effort to drive less than an hour to the eclipse path. And their response was pretty much along the lines of "it got darker, and was pretty neat, but I don't know what the big deal was". I felt so sorry for them; that they had missed the opportunity to see something so spectacular, literally on their doorstep, because they assumed that 99% was almost as good as 100%. In reality, they are a completely different thing.
    Since then, we have become "eclipse chasers", making it our goal to see the world by travelling to where paths of totality might lie (yes, it really is that spectacular that seeing an totally eclipsed Sun for even just a few minutes is worth the months of planning to get there!) In 2021, we used a total eclipse in Antarctica as an excuse to visit a continent we had always dreamed to visit (sadly, it was completely cloudy during the eclipse; fortunately, we did get to see Antarctica!). Then, in 2023, we travelled to Australia to see a solar eclipse there (again, our first time to a new continent for us, and that time we got to see both the country as well as a spectacularly totally eclipsed Sun in a cloudless sky). Of course, we will be certainly travelling to the next total solar eclipse in North America on April 8, 2024, and are hoping to travel to Spain in 2026 for an eclipse there.
    The bottom line - if you are even just anywhere in the vicinity of an eclipse track, make it your goal to get somewhere right in the middle of the track, in a place with a good likelihood of clear skies. Getting "close" isn't good enough - it's like "almost" winning the lottery. I guarantee you that I've never met someone who made an effort to get to the center of an eclipse track who was sorry they did.

  • @jeremypurdon4761
    @jeremypurdon4761 Год назад +3

    I've seen totality once in my life and it is truly awe-inspiring.
    I truly understand why our ancestors thought God's were angry at them for it.
    The complete removal of the sun. Your day to day activities then.... black. Nearly midnight black. I knew it was going to happen and it still took me a second to understand what just happened.
    It is absolutely impossible to say the feeling of how tiny you are compared to the size of these bodies in the sky.
    It is something I hope everyone can experience in their life at least once. It is one of the greatest things I've ever experienced and very very little things can ever top that experience.

  • @glengbh
    @glengbh Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @The_Great_Letter_E
    @The_Great_Letter_E 8 месяцев назад +78

    Who's here after april 8th, 2024?

  • @nathanj202
    @nathanj202 Год назад +2

    My astronomy professor mentioned almost every lecture how incredible a total solar eclipse is. He even said that he will retroactively fail any student who doesn’t see an eclipse,
    *And the student who come back say that he **_undersold_** how incredible it is!*

  • @penguin-IDK
    @penguin-IDK Год назад +8

    3:56 scared me, I was about to get my ass to america

  • @Toyota--Camry
    @Toyota--Camry Год назад +6

    I got to see the one in 2017 and I’d say it was one of the best moments of my life. I’ve counted the days until the next one this April ever since, and it’s even better that I don’t have to travel to see a total eclipse! I’m just really hoping it’s not cloudy

  • @VioletEnds
    @VioletEnds Год назад +3

    I'm really glad that I was in the path of totality for the solar eclipse in the US about 5 years ago, it's probably the only total solar eclipse I'll ever see

  • @stonerbland256
    @stonerbland256 8 месяцев назад +2

    The April 8 2024 eclipse was so close to me, we saw 99.5% coverage, it got significantly colder out, and like just before the sun sets level dark, but the 0.5% makes such a difference

    • @fromnorway643
      @fromnorway643 8 месяцев назад

      The 0.5% is about as bright as the whole Sun seen from Uranus.

  • @nickdavis965
    @nickdavis965 Год назад +6

    1:23 I totally disagree. I witnessed the annular eclipse of october 14th 2023 and I was deeply shocked and mesmerized. The sky got VERY dim and it got very cold. Its NOTHING like a total eclipse. But it was most definitely and amazing event. They are not just like partial eclipses. There is a moment when you realize the sun truly is being taken away and its like this incredibly intense feeling.

  • @marschallblucher6197
    @marschallblucher6197 8 месяцев назад +2

    I went to see the April 8th eclipse and what I found amazing was how even when most of thr sun is covered it isn't much darker. (It was cloudy tbf, but it really felt like more of a rainy day but without thr rain)
    Then it rappidly got dark, like when the lights turn off at a movie theater. Birds were going crazy, I could hear crickets coming out, and it got much colder.
    Then it was just.... Over.... Like some sorta glitch in the matrix that just got patched.
    If you ever have thr opportunity to see an eclipse take a prepare ahead of time, mark it as a day off, do whatever you can to see it. I skipped 2 college lectures and I normally _never_ skip classes.

  • @frahfiggity
    @frahfiggity Год назад +4

    Your explanation of how 1 moon day compares to 1 moon year due to it slowly moving away was pretty mindblowing to me!

    • @shufadragon
      @shufadragon 10 месяцев назад

      It was cool to see in a space video game (Elite Dangerous) the moon revolves around its axis every 27.3 days and it takes 27.3 days to go around the Earth. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tidal_locking

  • @kardona_3
    @kardona_3 8 месяцев назад +1

    Saw a 90% eclipse yesterday thought it was blocked heavily by clouds. Still a memorable moment.

  • @manifestgtr
    @manifestgtr 8 месяцев назад +4

    The corona is something you can never prepare yourself for…I’ve seen it twice now (2017 and 2024) and you can’t even believe it’s real. It’s this ghostly, radiant, whiter than white entity that stays with you forever. I’ll never forget the first time I saw it. It’s almost panic-inducingly beautiful. Being a space nerd and someone who’s deeply into the universe and our place in it, it’s almost like the closest thing I have to attending “church” in a weird way. It brings me closer to the things in which I believe and allows me to appreciate them, as corny and stupid as that sounds.

  • @thirdiprodigy3579
    @thirdiprodigy3579 8 месяцев назад +1

    Me and my family were blessed to see 99% totality in Toronto during a split second through the heavy clouds.
    It was amazing.

  • @guyswhat_isthepoint_0flife4141
    @guyswhat_isthepoint_0flife4141 8 месяцев назад +4

    Me watching the video after the eclipse

  • @jah211084
    @jah211084 Год назад +1

    Having experienced 2 total eclipses, they’re very impressive. Watching the shadow rapidly move across the earths surface is awe inspiring, and the temperature drops around 7 degrees Celsius

  • @Kliest3
    @Kliest3 Год назад +11

    I'm super excited for the 2024 eclipse. Being in southern illinois, i was able to see the 2017 eclipse without traveling. Seems the odds of living in the path cross would be a fun calculation. The region is starting to prepare for the tourist invasion with local colleges setting up events. My wife and I have a fiber business with sheep and alpacas and we are planning an event for the eclipse date. Alpacalypse 2024 is nigh! Hope the weather is good.

    • @oscarinacan
      @oscarinacan Год назад

      Where are you in Southern il? I'm by Dale, ne of carbondale

    • @Kliest3
      @Kliest3 Год назад

      @@oscarinacan Opdyke area near Mount Vernon

    • @oscarinacan
      @oscarinacan Год назад +2

      @Kliest3 - witnessing a totality is unreal, not having to travel for it makes it a 100 times better
      Edit - Forgot to ask if you have a website for your business. I support local business when i can and alpaca is comfortable af.

    • @Kliest3
      @Kliest3 Год назад +1

      Bernard Family Farm. Website is fairly new, but we also have a Facebook page.

    • @timewave02012
      @timewave02012 Год назад +1

      I live in Illinois and went to Kaskaskia for the 2017 eclipse (and general historical interest). The drive to St. Louis the night before wasn't bad. Back took almost twice as long as it should have, due to traffic. I'm thinking about flying to Texas for the one next year.

  • @ivdeadelendaest
    @ivdeadelendaest 11 месяцев назад +2

    Had the privilege of seeing the 2017 Great American Eclipse from totality. Was legitimately one of the coolest experiences of my life and it's a shame most people will never experience one in their lifetime.

  • @beansnrice321
    @beansnrice321 Год назад +8

    This was a strange Elden Ring lore video but I'll take it. =\

  • @ADAMSIXTIES
    @ADAMSIXTIES 8 месяцев назад +2

    I miss them already

  • @CDiPaola04
    @CDiPaola04 8 месяцев назад +5

    "Let's hope it isn't cloudy." :)

    • @IRLSuperb
      @IRLSuperb 8 месяцев назад +2

      It was cloudy for me, but just before the big time and then clouds move just enough for me to be able to see it. I was only at the 92% partial eclipse but just seen the super skinny blade of the sun was enough to get me excited one day I’ll see the total one.

  • @travis69665ify
    @travis69665ify 8 месяцев назад +1

    It was completely overcast for the eclipse here. But the darkness was still really cool to see

  • @Salty10034
    @Salty10034 Год назад +3

    The city I live in (Toledo) Ohio is gonna have a full solar eclipse next year, I’m so happy about that and my city is gonna have so many visitors. So I’m excited for next year.

  • @trueriver1950
    @trueriver1950 11 месяцев назад +1

    I was in Cornwall for the 1999 solar eclipse and it was cloudy where I was :(
    I did get to see a shadowy sun with a huge bite out of it through thinning clouds, but even then the sun wasn't really shining.
    Only a few lucky people got to be in the places where a gap in the clouds coincided with the eclipse, as there was something like 95% cloud cover

  • @Michaelonyoutub
    @Michaelonyoutub Год назад +5

    The 2024 eclipse passes by might house, and directly over my work. I will have to take an hour off or something that Monday. Too bad it wasn't a week earlier, as it then would have been the Easter Monday holiday, though I guess that would never happen since the date for Easter is the sunday after the first full moon after March 21st, which means Easter can never be nearer than a week away from a solar eclipse as an eclipse happens with a full moon.

  • @4llowyourdream
    @4llowyourdream Год назад +2

    Okay, you've successfully scared me into looking into buying tickets to travel and see the eclipse in person.

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 Год назад +3

    can't wait for April 8, 2024

  • @theironrhino110
    @theironrhino110 Год назад +2

    I live in the path of the upcoming solar eclipse but considering it’s in April that can be very cloudy and rainy I’m hoping for the best

  • @JimmyG_2013Arizona
    @JimmyG_2013Arizona 8 месяцев назад +3

    A solar eclipse actually happened literally today

    • @Mapleshade...
      @Mapleshade... 8 месяцев назад +1

      Thats what he was talking about with the 2024 thingy

  • @princegribbleteysar
    @princegribbleteysar 2 месяца назад

    2:31 the way he said "boring" reminds me of that Pinocchio voice "on my oooowwwnnn~" 😂

  • @PaulBunkey
    @PaulBunkey Год назад +4

    Do Flaties have explanation for eclipses?

  • @jordanpadula2624
    @jordanpadula2624 Год назад

    I drove to view the totality a few years ago and it was the most wild thing I have ever witnessed. Hundreds of people fell completely silent in a 30 second period. Birds stopped chirping. I have never been somewhere that quiet with that many people. I won't ever forget that

  • @PMA_ReginaldBoscoG
    @PMA_ReginaldBoscoG Год назад +8

    New fear unlocked: not watching the last ever total solar eclipse within one's lifetime ☠️

  • @ponraul1221
    @ponraul1221 Год назад +1

    I remember when I was like 4 years old sleeping on the front porch and waking up to a total solar eclipse. I still remember how vividly weird it looked.

    • @LipticZone
      @LipticZone 8 месяцев назад

      did u look at it directly

    • @ponraul1221
      @ponraul1221 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@LipticZone yeah lol, it must've been the solar eclipse of June 10, 2002. I guess it wasn't a total eclipse, but it definitely got blue and very dim

    • @LipticZone
      @LipticZone 8 месяцев назад

      @ponraul1221 were your eyes fine afterwards?

    • @ponraul1221
      @ponraul1221 8 месяцев назад

      @@LipticZone I guess they're fine now, I have 20/20 vision and haven't had issues other than a slight astigmatism. It's probably not healthy to do it though lol

  • @LilMarioAM
    @LilMarioAM 8 месяцев назад +3

    Fun fact for people who don’t know what corona is it means crown in Spanish

  • @allocater2
    @allocater2 Год назад +1

    great, after so much talk about total eclipse, I now have TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE HEART stuck my head

  • @EEE-1409
    @EEE-1409 Год назад +5

    Solar Eclipses are truly magnificent!

    • @EEE-1409
      @EEE-1409 Год назад

      @etrestre9403 Wut

  • @383mazda
    @383mazda 8 месяцев назад +1

    I remember seeing the annular eclipse in 1995 in grade school, plus a few other partial and annular eclipses since then, but never a total eclipse. Yesterday my wife and i loaded up the car and drove an hour to get into totality.
    Seeing the sun partially blocked by the moon through tinted glasses is neat and all, but looking at a total eclipse with the naked eye was spectacular. I will absolutly try to make the next one in 20 or so years.

  • @josefwolanczyk4866
    @josefwolanczyk4866 8 месяцев назад +5

    …it was cloudy.

    • @hiccup7457
      @hiccup7457 8 месяцев назад

      It was cloudy for so many people.. my area had just cleared up before totality.

    • @BritanniaMaps2048
      @BritanniaMaps2048 8 месяцев назад

      Same

    • @AdamKayaan
      @AdamKayaan 8 месяцев назад

      It was sunny

  • @tsarbomb_chan2537
    @tsarbomb_chan2537 Год назад +1

    I was in the US in the summer of 2017 and I had no idea I was witnessing such a rare occurrence. We don't see much or any total eclipses in Central Asia

  • @AxlKai
    @AxlKai 8 месяцев назад +3

    2 more days!

  • @kleoserebus99
    @kleoserebus99 8 месяцев назад +2

    i saw the solar eclipse today in a totality zone within vermont. sucks that there is gonna be nearly 100 years before the next one in that spot.

  • @mratanusarkar
    @mratanusarkar Год назад +4

    Even after years, it's still the same as always... Awesome!! ❤

  • @echoharmony926
    @echoharmony926 Год назад +2

    As a dark mode user, when the background went from black to white it felt like I was actually looking at the sun.

  • @charleslambert3368
    @charleslambert3368 Год назад +12

    This is why, if I am elected, I will commit to a 10% enlargement of the Moon. A vote for me is a vote for eclipses!

    • @MrT------5743
      @MrT------5743 Год назад

      I do not want to pay for the cost of moving the moon. It would probably take 100 times the mass of Mt everest in fuel to nudge the moon.

    • @kahlzun
      @kahlzun Год назад

      @@MrT------5743 you wouldnt need to move it, just build large sails or similar around the visible edge. Since the moon is tidally locked (ish) you will always have the same parts edge-on to the earth and could build something there to visually increase the size of the moon

    • @MrT------5743
      @MrT------5743 Год назад

      @@kahlzun not exactly. We can see 59% of the moon from earth due to lunar libration. So you couldn't just easily build something on the edge. Because the edge isn't always the same edge.
      And I'm still not going to pay for that. And suspect the majority of people would not want to just for future people millions of years into the future can see a total solar eclipse.

    • @omjoshi5140
      @omjoshi5140 Год назад

      learn to take a joke bro @@MrT------5743

  • @LeCaNiVideos
    @LeCaNiVideos Год назад +2

    2:01 What are the other 6%? Partial eclipses?

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Год назад

      I assume its when the sun and the moon have exactly the same size ?

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman Год назад +2

      The video shows a note about the last 6% during that part about the percentages; just have to pay attention.

    • @LeCaNiVideos
      @LeCaNiVideos Год назад +1

      @@SgtSupaman Thank you! Wow, how could I miss that? xD

  • @bluey-next777
    @bluey-next777 10 месяцев назад +4

    0:45
    Corona
    Norona (LOL)
    Corona

    • @PuccaHut
      @PuccaHut 8 месяцев назад

      In spanish the joke its better 🤓☝️

  • @AbsolutDasher
    @AbsolutDasher 8 месяцев назад +2

    a partial (for me) solar eclipse happened today, and even though i only got about 90% coverage, it was still really cool to see. The weirdest part about it was that it looked like it was about 6 in the evening, but the sky was still high in the sky. It looked like bad lighting in a low budget movie.

    • @Mapleshade...
      @Mapleshade... 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah mexico got to see the total eclipse i did not even see anything cuz i am not in the usa saddly

  • @ianhale4466
    @ianhale4466 8 месяцев назад +3

    Hold on.. if the moon is leaving us, it was closer yesterday and further tomorrow. So if people saw the same moon face in the beginning, and we see the same moon face now. And the reason we only see one side is because it rotates the same speed it orbits the earth. The rotation is a control, it cannot change without an outside force acting on it. The orbit changes, the further you go the longer it'll take to make a full orbit. And this tidal lock is so finally tuned the slightest different in anything will cause a different part of the face to be shown within a lifetime. Sooo why do we see the same thing the Greeks did?

    • @IRLSuperb
      @IRLSuperb 8 месяцев назад +4

      Just remember that the moon has been having the same tidal-lock with earth for a lot longer than humans have had civilizations… if this answers your question, great but if it doesn’t, I don’t know how else to put it. We humans are literally like one day old compared to the 4.5 Billion years the moon has been with us.

  • @bch9124
    @bch9124 11 месяцев назад

    Took the kids to see a total eclipse along the Snake River on the eastern edge of Oregon a few years back. I hope that down the road, they remember and reflect on the experience as much as I do. Very thankful to have passively taken a video of the whole thing on a tripod while enjoying the moment with the family.

  • @Nickylinch-sn3ck
    @Nickylinch-sn3ck 8 месяцев назад +2

    The sun has coivd

  • @bans5
    @bans5 8 месяцев назад +2

    Here after seeing Totality :D Was a very cool experience :D

  • @TheLaughingPanda
    @TheLaughingPanda Год назад +1

    I saw the 2017 eclipse and have already made my reservations for 2024! It was an absolutely mesmerizing experience, no photo has ever done justice to how the sun's corona looked in real life. I can absolutely believe that people in the past who saw that would call it an act of god.

  • @jswayne7546
    @jswayne7546 8 месяцев назад +1

    I remember years ago, there was supposed to be a partial eclipse in the area, but morning fog ruined everyone's chances of seeing it. I have witnessed a couple lunar eclipses in my life, which aren't as spectacular but easier (and safer) to observe.

  • @davyaldy76
    @davyaldy76 Год назад +1

    Having seen a total solar eclipse this year I cannot recommend enough seeing one for yourself. Fortunately there's another one within a few days drive of me in 2028 so I am looking forward to that.

  • @-Titanusshingodzilla2014-
    @-Titanusshingodzilla2014- 8 месяцев назад +2

    I just saw the total eclipse yesterday, it was literally night time.

  • @sechmascm
    @sechmascm Год назад +1

    The only real time I experienced an eclipse (might have been total) was in early highschool. We were in the middle of class in a pretty well illuminated classroom, so we didn't have the lights on. Suddenly everything goes dark and classmates start reverting to their primal programming. But we never went to see the sun/moon, and thanks to that I can still see properly since I wouldn't have had proper viewing equipment for when it passed

  • @klaudiopeqini3500
    @klaudiopeqini3500 Год назад +2

    Do you get it now flatearthers?

  • @carlsoll
    @carlsoll Год назад

    3:53 Yooo TY for putting that clip in of the Earth for that conclusion. Super *Super* Clear Now

  • @West_Coast_Mainline
    @West_Coast_Mainline 10 месяцев назад +1

    I missed a total solar eclipse to do fucking multiplication tables

  • @StainedGlassLamp
    @StainedGlassLamp 8 месяцев назад +1

    I've seen both the 2017 solar eclipse and the 2024 solar eclipse. In 2017 I was more so towards the edge of totality, in McMinnville, TN, where the corona appears a bit brighter. This year I was in the direct centerine in Cape Girardeau MO, where you could see less of the corona, but was over twice as long. It's up to personal preference which looks better, but honsetly I prefer the centerline totality over edge totality!

  • @SamSB250
    @SamSB250 Год назад +1

    I got to see a total eclipse, it just happened when i was going back to Shanghai. it was already a cloudy day, then when it happened, it was like night time. it was so awesome.

  • @SJNaka101
    @SJNaka101 Год назад +1

    Yeah, after my first total eclipse i decided never to miss one within 2000 miles of me

    • @SJNaka101
      @SJNaka101 Год назад +1

      @@Stossburg see you next year if you're American! 😃

  • @florianbasier
    @florianbasier Год назад

    2:03 how come we have 52% of annular and 42% of total... what are the other 4%?

  • @schl1910
    @schl1910 Год назад +1

    Can you acknowledge the fact that the sun also grew by about 14% in the past few billion years and is still growing at an exponentially increasing rate? This might be just as important as the fact that the moon gets farther away.

  • @ghyslainabel
    @ghyslainabel Год назад +1

    That was for the solar eclipses. The next question is, when will be the last lunar eclipse where the Moon will not enter the cone of shadow of the Earth.

  • @L1011MD11
    @L1011MD11 Год назад +1

    In a total solar eclipse and since the moon is tidally locked, does it mean that side of the moon facing earth is the dark side?
    Also, the phase of the moon is always the "New Moon" in a total solar eclipse, right?

  • @CassiusColeman
    @CassiusColeman 8 месяцев назад +1

    The Blues Clues-esque handy dandy notebook bass music 😎