• @[email protected]
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    741 month ago

    So sometime between now and September, the nighttime sky where I live will be cloudy for five days straight. Got it.

    • DarkThoughts
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      121 month ago

      I can’t even see stars when it isn’t cloudy. Couldn’t see any of the recent northern lights either.

    • Random_Character_A
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      91 month ago

      Lucky. At leats you have a chance. Here sun hardly sets during that time. It’s blue skies most of that time.

  • @[email protected]
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    171 month ago

    Sometime between now and September, if you look to the left-hand side of the Northern Crown, what will look like a new star will shine for five days or so.

    Pretty cool if you own a telescope and are into astronomy, but not exactly solar flare levels of hype here. Don’t wake up your SO and drag them out onto the lawn at 2am to show them this Nova.

    • @prettybunnys
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      251 month ago

      Alternately do, and witness a cosmic event together.

      Idk you do you

    • m3t00🌎OPM
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      31 month ago

      went outside for 15 minutes. no lights. eh. I just try to wrap my head around the scale of space. should invest in some automatic scope. they have ones you set on the roof and observe from the desktop. few thousand $$ installed

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        My entry point was 10x50 binoculars. There’s a lot of faint fuzzy white blobs out there to see with them.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 month ago

    Not visible from my part of the Southern hemisphere. :( The Northern hemisphere gets all the cool astronomical events.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 month ago

    “Predictions in astronomy come in two flavors. One is super precise—like the eclipse is going to pass over the city of Houston at exactly 11:35 pm.”

    I presume he means a total lunar eclipse, but I didn’t know that one can pass over a city. I think he meant an instead of pm?

    • @[email protected]
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      71 month ago

      Lunar eclipses have a range they’re visible from just like solar eclipses do, but they tend to be much larger since it depends only on if the side of the moon being eclipsed is visible from a given location at the time

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        Understood, but, do they “pass overhead”? I have only heard this term used in discussions about total solar eclipses.

        • Pennomi
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          91 month ago

          I mean, an eclipse certainly isn’t moving underground…

        • m3t00🌎OPM
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          11 month ago

          saw one that could only be seen from planes over a pole N/S? forget

        • Zorque
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          11 month ago

          I’d imagine they pass overhead in a similar way to that total solar eclipses do.