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ECLIPSE
A quick few milliseconds is all it took for the wave to eclipse this small pebble.
As funny/sad as it was...the pebble was replaced with another one. =)
Taken during the same afternoon with this
location: Cannon beach, Oregon Pacific Coast
Thank You for viewing this image my flickr friends.
~ seen in my photostream: www.flickr.com/photos/donpar/show
Ashley Greene and Xavier Samuel attend a photocall for 'The Twilight Saga: Eclipse' at the Castellana Intercontinental Hotel on June 28, 2010 in Madrid, Spain.
The eclipse on Thursday morning. I was going to go behind the Supreme Court to get the sun behind the Peace Tower, but there were cranes everywhere, so I had to change plans at the last minute. I got it coming up near the Library of Parliament from a nearby bridge viewpoint instead. You'd be surprised how fast it moves sideways as it rises, I had to keep moving after every few shots. (HDR image)
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October 14 annular eclipse. Approximately mid-annularity observed from Roswell, NM US. Canon R5 600mm F6.3 ISO 200 exp 1/800
One of the most amazing experiences I've had in quite some time... Pretty hard to describe the feeling of it transitioning all the way to night in the middle of the day. A soft silence filled the graveyard in Wheatland as we gazed in wonder at the sky...
the work of ryan policky.
ryan@latenightweeknight.com
The Sun’s corona is only visible during a total eclipse, when the Moon obscures the Sun’s bright face, revealing its dimmer surrounding atmosphere. The crown-like corona is pearly-white. This photo was taken during a total solar eclipse on Tuesday, July 2, 2019, from the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory. The observatory is located in the foothills of the Andes, 7,241 feet (2200 meters) above sea level in the Coquimbo Region of northern Chile. A total solar eclipse was visible across parts of Chile and Argentina, while a partial eclipse was visible across much of South America.
Credit: NASA/Goddard/Rebecca Roth
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
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Actress Ashley Greene arrives to the premiere of "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" during the 2010 Los Angeles Film Festival at Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on June 24, 2010 in Los Angeles, California.
Today’s (25th October) partial solar eclipse captured at 09.34 UT in Ha light from Kent, UK, with my Lunt LS152THa, and Altair Hypercam 174M cooled camera. This was imaged between rain showers and thick clouds. Notice the moon occulting the large prominence. As a point of information, I've orientated this to match the Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG) images. It is therefore different to the visual orientation of the sun in the sky at the time.
I wanted to take a shot of the full eclipse behind our church tower. Unfortunately this is as far as I got as the moon disappeared behind clouds shortly after.
Mondfinsternis II
Ich wollte die volle Mondfinsternis hinter unserem Kirchturm fotografieren. Leider ging es nach diesem Bild nicht weiter, weil der Mond kurz darauf hinter den Wolken verschwand.
This is a photo taken during the eclipse on April 8th. It was done by holding open a printed calendar page of a photo that I took of the sunset at Port Maitland Beach last summer, while also positioning a plastic colander so that its shadow falls on the calendar page along with the multiple crescent shapes of the partially eclipsed sun that are shining through the holes in the colander. The creative concept for the photo was my sister Margie's idea.
Ashley Greene attends the premiere of 'The Twilight Saga: Eclipse' at Kinepolis Cinema on June 29, 2010 in Atwerpen, Belgium at Metropolis on June 29, 2010 in Antwerpen, Belgium.
Actress Ashley Greene arrives to the premiere of "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" during the 2010 Los Angeles Film Festival at Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on June 24, 2010 in Los Angeles, California.
Westwood Ranch, northern Arizona
I have done a lot of timelapse, sunset, milky way shots by this old tree. Here’s one more composite . Blue hour shot combined with eclipse timelapse.
Blue Hour: Canon 6DM2 14-35mm lens at 24mm, F 4.0, 4 sec, ISO 1000
Timelapse: Canon 6DM2 14-35mm lens at 20mm, F 5.0, 1/800, ISO 100, and varying shutter speeds to totality at 3.2 seconds. Stationary tripod.
I shot 493 images, and used every 10th one for this composite
This composite sequences all the phases or stages that I imaged during the total lunar eclipse on 28.09.15. From early ingression penumbral (top left) to late egression penumbral (bottom).
finally had the chance to put this composite together. always been wanting to do one of an eclipse. had perfect weather for it this most recent and beyond stoked with the end result.
Seeing the large Corona during Totality was absolutely stunning! I lost track of time, and struggled to get it centered in my LCD back on the camera. Before I knew it Totality was over and the Diamond Ring appeared. What fun !!
All shots taken are single shots with the exception of Totality, when I used 7-shots combined to show the large extent of the Corona.
If you're able to view or download the original, you'll be able to see much more detail especially the sun spots and coarse solar surface.
(photos taken 1-4pm EST August 21, 2017)
El eclipse lunar total tuvo lugar el 15 de junio de 2011. Es el primero de los dos eclipses lunares totales en 2011, el segundo ocurrirá el 10 de diciembre. Es raro relativamente un eclipse lunar total cuando la luna pasa por el centro de la sombra de la Tierra. El último eclipse lunar total fue el 20 de febrero de 2008. El próximo eclipse lunar total central será el 15 de abril del 2014.
The total lunar eclipse took place on June 15, 2011. It is the first of two total lunar eclipses in 2011, the second will occur on December 10. It is relatively rare a total lunar eclipse when the moon passes through the center of the Earth's shadow. The last total lunar eclipse was on February 20, 2008. The next total lunar eclipse center is 15 April 2014.1
Actress Ashley Greene attends "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" premiere at Kinepolis Cinema on June 28, 2010 in Madrid, Spain.
Eclipse - an obscuring of the light from one celestial body by the passage of another between it and its source of illumination
The temperatures in Madison plummeted to well below -10 degrees but that didn't stop people from going out and photographing the lunar eclipse on January 20. Handheld shots were out of the question given the limited light so I took this by stacking 75 continuous frames while the camera was mounted on a tripod.
solar eclipse behind the town hall and war memorial in Hanley, Stoke on Trent. I only had five minutes break from work and attached a pair of sunglasses to my camera to take these shots!
On 2 July 2019 a total solar eclipse passed over ESO’s La Silla Observatory in Chile. The eclipse lasted roughly two and a half hours, with almost two minutes of totality at 20:39 UT, and was visible across a narrow band of Chile and Argentina. To celebrate this rare event ESO invited 1000 people, including dignitaries, school children, the media, researchers, and the general public, to come to the Observatory to watch the eclipse from this unique location.
More information: www.eso.org/public/images/eso1912a/
Credit:
ESO/R. Lucchesi
Actress Ashley Greene arrives to the premiere of "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" during the 2010 Los Angeles Film Festival at Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on June 24, 2010 in Los Angeles, California.
The moon covers the sun during the Aug. 21 total solar eclipse, as seen from Gordonsville, Tennessee, some 45 miles east of Nashville, in this striking image captured by photographer Todd Freestone, a radio frequency communications engineer at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
Image credit: NASA/MSFC/Todd Freestone
For More NASA Marshall Eclipse Images
Yesterday's Eclipse (3 of 3) This is several minutes after the eclipse began; the entire process took about 2 hours.
Nikon D500
Nikon 200-500mm F/5.6E ED AF-S VR
420mm - f11.0 - 1/400 - ISO 320
Actress Ashley Greene attends the premiere of 'The Twilight Saga: Eclipse' at Kinepolis Cinema on June 28, 2010 in Madrid, Spain.
My little village lies in the path of totality of the impending solar eclipse. The concept as been largely theoretical for the past few years. But with the eclipse now just one week away, the reality is setting in. The immediate concern is for the weather and the hopes for clear skies. Can only imagine the collective disappointment of potentially millions of people if such a spectacular heavenly moment is blotted out by overcast skies. But whether or not the sun is actually visible on earth, the eclipse will still occur. And in the oath of totality, day will turn to night for approximately three minutes.
I've read up on all of the science behind the eclipse. But honestly what enthralls me even more is the astrological significance. Total eclipses in particular tend to delineate major inflection points in life. There is the time before the eclipse, and the time after. The eclipse itself forms the bridge between the two realms. But it's a bridge that burns up as you cross it. You make it safely across, but can never return. Not sure how that will play out on the world stage; sometimes the impact is not realized except in retrospect. Good or bad, it's the sense of finality that causes me some apprehension. And being in the path of totality only heightens the effect.
Nothing metaphorical about the recent collapse of the Francis Scott Key bridge in Baltimore. The timing of this is especially jarring.
We are up in Donegal for a few days. Seemed good to be so far West for the partial eclipse this morning - we were to get to see 46% of the sun disc being obscured. So a bit more than we would have seen at home and a lot more than folk in England or Scotland could expect to see.
but weather in Donegal can be a barrier to most activities. ..and so was the case today. There was no sun to see and without a compass I would not have been able to say even in what general direction it was!
continuous rain most of the morning. It was quite dull for 11am but if I hadnt known about the eclipse, I would have assumed that the dullness was caused by the cloud alone.
anyway this is what Teelin bay and harbour looked like around peak eclipse, with camera pointing roughly in the predicted direction of the sun.
The Stranglers - Always The Sun