Search results for eclipse

DPReview Editors' Challenge resultsLast week, we issued a challenge to the DPReview community to show us what you got. We wanted to see your best images from the North American total solar eclipse, and over 150 of you submitted!We saw heaps of creativity and technical know-how on display. It was also interesting to see all the solar flares that matched among photos taken hundreds of miles apart.
NASA employees use protective glasses to view a partial solar eclipse from the rooftop at NASA Headquarters on Monday, Aug. 21, 2017, in Washington, DC.Image: Connie Moore/NASANorth America will experience a total solar eclipse today, gradually turning a band from Mexico to Canada as dark as night as the moon's shadow casts across the Earth below. For observers outside the region, there's still a
A partial solar eclipse is seen as the Sun rises to the left of the United States Capitol building on June 10, 2021, as seen from Arlington, Virginia.Image: Bill Ingalls/NASAOn Monday, April 8, 2024, a total solar eclipse will cross North America, passing over Western Mexico starting in Mazatlán and heading up into the United States and across to Newfoundland, Canada. NASA has mapped the route wi
A view of the Aug. 21, 2017, total solar eclipse from Madras, Oregon.Image: Gopalswamy/NASASunsketcher, a new NASA-backed project with an iOS and Android app, wants your photographs of the “Great American Eclipse.” (Incidentally, so do we.)Recent VideosScientists behind the project want to gather more information about the sun's interior and aid their work in accurately measuring the shape of the
developed by scientists at western kentucky university and backed by NASA, the app invites users to join the mission to map the sun's structure during the total solar eclipse. The post NASA-supported sunsketcher app lets you photograph the solar eclipse appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.
Star Flyer – the 2013 eclipse as seen from the deck of a four-masted sailing ship racing across the Atlantic. Totality was 42 seconds long and I was on a quickly moving (and rocking) surface.Photo and caption by Tyler NordgrenEditor's note: We originally ran this story in conjunction with the solar eclipse of August 21, 2017. We've updated and republished it ahead of the solar eclipse of April 8,



Posted by BenEgg 755 days ago (Editorial)



Clickiz.com is a social bookmarking place where you can share, find & discuss the best news around on most topics. We focus on hi-tech reviews, gadgets and geekery but we like almost anything that's awesome, appealing and thought-provoking! er6i9ds5mz



Add to Technorati Favorites
Username:

Password:

Remember: