image from here
did you catch it?
they did here,
awesome...do you think they did?
image from here
wow...now that's a camera...pretty sure he must have, right?
i truly think he certainly did...
(according to his flickr page, he was practicing for the big day bec. he was going to be on a boat
...wow...now that's soooo cool!)
image from here
no matter what you believe in, what culture, what race...
it's such a rare opportunity to catch it... image from here
to see more amazing photos of the 2009 solar eclipse Asia go here
according to the associated press and an article written By ERIC TALMADGE, Associated Press Writer Eric Talmadge, Associated Press Writer –
Wed Jul 22, 8:33 am ET...the eclipse
"start[ed] off in India just after dawn, the eclipse was visible across a wide swath of Asia before moving over southern Japan and then off into the Pacific Ocean. In some parts of Asia, it lasted as long as 6 minutes and 39 seconds. The eclipse is the longest since July 11, 1991, when a total eclipse lasting 6 minutes, 53 seconds was visible from Hawaii to South America. There will not be a longer eclipse than Wednesday's until 2132."
wow what a rare opportunity for millions of people to experience in Asia...the next long eclipse is expected to come 123 years from now...
how lucky are those that were able to see a part of history being made...
to see more amazing pictures and read this article go here
(image from here )
according to Fred Espenak, astronomer,of SkyandTelescope.com:
"The longest total solar eclipse of the 21st century begins at dawn near the west coast of India and crosses southern China before heading out into the Pacific Ocean. Red lines denote regions where a partial eclipse is visible. Blue lines indicate mideclipse in Universal Time." Click on the image for a larger version.
Fred Espenak discusses future total eclipses too:
"Future Total Eclipses
On July 11, 2010, this part of the world will be favored with its third total solar eclipse in as many years. The track is almost entirely over the South Pacific. Easter Island and southern Chile (at sunset) offer the only landfalls. And the South Pacific also hosts the next one, on November 13, 2012. A total solar eclipse won’t cross the Americas until August 21, 2017, when the Moon’s umbra will sweep from Oregon to South Carolina." for more information on the article go here.
images from here (i just added text)
awwww...
images from here+here
how spectacular is that? truly anything is possible....
image from here
...i've only seen a solar or lunar eclipse a few times in my life...
3 comments:
Those Pandas are sooo cute!
I have never seen eclipse, but I am sooo wanting to be ready for the next one. I will see you in Tahiti!
Missed that eclipse! But just wanted to comment on a blog that has "Besame Mucho" by Trio Los Panhcos on their Playlist!!! Your blog header is GORGEOUS too!!!!
m ^..^
Clouds blocked the eclipse here. Gee, I was so disappointed but who could claim for. I looked up the sky in vain but strangely all the cicadas in my garden stopped buzzing when the grey sky got a bit darker when the eclipse started above the cloudy sky.
I didn't have a chance to have a look but many children and adults who were so eager to have a look, stayed looking up and finally had a luck to see the eclipse once at the very moment when the coulds were cleared by the wind.
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