NASAのインスタグラム(nasagoddard) - 7月24日 04時55分
Total Solar Eclipse - July 2, 2019 —
The Moon is seen passing in front of the Sun during a total solar eclipse on Tuesday, July 2, 2019, directly over the National Science Foundation’s (@NSFgov) 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 and partial 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
#eclipsesolar2019 #eclipse2019 #eclipsetotal #NSFScience #NSF #science #sun #moon #earth #nasa #nasagoddard #photogarpher #eclipse #chile
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erinelizabetho
I’ve seen both a partial and a total eclipse and there is nothing like totality. It was one of the craziest experiences of my life. I hope to get into the line of totality again someday. It’s crazy to think that someday the spacing of our planet, the moon, and the sun will reach a point where the moon cannot perfectly or completely block the sun, and eclipses as we know them won’t exist anymore. this is a really rare and special experience in time as well as place.
kushravinder
Solar eclipse are described in Mahabharat, a great ancient indian epic of about 5000 years back
juanmrestrepoa
Hi ! I have a question... what would be seen if you look at a horizon of events "sideways" ?
i_am_not_jojo_
Hello fellow people I post the same picture of jojo siwa everyday!!👽👽
floraofthefauna
@mistyroseok prettiest post of that eclipse I’ve seen ?
tiago_scardoso
Are the magnetic fields of the moon in the middle photo?
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