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Global Star Party 47 Part 2

 

Transcript:

live streaming service yeah presented by her majesty queen elizabeth ii
[Laughter] that's right
that's right [Music]
prince charles duke of edinburgh inherited the title from his father who
passed away last month
next tuesday i'll try to get a picture of the new observatory to show everyone
my cousin mitzi mills is watching right now oh
yes most of our audience will be in europe and asia i would suppose i would suppose where
they do not get yeah actually
so let's see we're gonna start sharing
this
yes
so
um
scotty yeah uh sometime if you wouldn't mind sending me that
uh nasa video that you ran earlier yeah i'd be happy to that is by far the
best of the ones i've ever seen you do which one did you like that whole series there the whole thing
the uh i want to study the uh video of the crowd in jpl see if i can find
gene shoemaker and then the uh recording of the launch of the of the
saturn five in slow motion was just wasn't that incredible yeah yeah
uh
um
i'm gonna go for a couple of minutes see if i can see the moon out there yeah go for it so i will be right back
hey tony
uh
so
this video has no audio to it but it has lots of great visuals about
that supplied by nasa about the the moon and the uh you know this super moon
eclipse here it's showing apogee and
perigee and uh the moon's at um
you know full and it's at perigee that's when it becomes a super moon and that's what we have tonight
yeah and i just got a good view of the moon there's light cloud but it's not interfering at all with the
good view of the moon and there's no eclipse yet at least i can't see anything right you can't see the penumbral phase
yet
now this visualization david is uh showing you know the question is why does the moon turn
red during a lunar eclipse what's a good answer for that
well generally i would say that the earth's atmosphere just as thomas hardy's poem says yeah
the earth's atmosphere is gives the moon a red hue except
at the 1963 eclipse which i saw where there was that uh eruption of a
volcano about six months earlier and the uh eruption so dark in the
atmosphere that the moon simply vanished at totality the danger of zero that eclipse the
darkest eclipse might have been the darkest nuclear eclipse in recorded history it was
really dark wow i haven't seen a door on eclipse that
dark since then uh-huh
this was all b-roll that they prepared for the i guess nasa will have like a
6 a.m uh live stream as well
yeah but your subscriber because we have we have david levy it's
ravine shakespeare that's right
actually it's better because we have explore scientific alliance that's right
and uh the star party coming up in uh a year from september that's right
we should be able to do it no problem we probably didn't get away with just this september but
you're probably wise to wait a year
um is really very interesting scotty it is it's a good stuff to learn about the movie yes
that detail that's a great i guess this is all lro scotty when is your birthday
it is june 8th it's coming up it's coming up yeah
can i get something ordered for you david
i think you'll like it i'm sure i will whatever it is i think i will i
certainly think i will like it
and now we have simon tang who is joining us hey simon i'm back you're back
what's your skies like not good it's um i mean i can kind of see where the
moon is but it's just behind a wall of clouds right now
well we have light cloud but the noise not interfering with the moon at all
beatrice and belgium says we have here sun and clouds at the moment
thick solid overcast in oracle arizona from mike wiesner
it is overcast here in arkansas northwest arkansas anyways uh andreas nilsson uh who's been on our
program many times so he says greetings from a rainy stockholm
well we have light cloud but it's not the moon is shining nicely through it
there we go i guess that's what the eclipse looks like from the moon
it's a solar eclipse i wonder if the lro will capture any of that
i hear the whirring of a go-to mount yeah it's just doing the um the home and
homing alignment back uh in stockholm
a couple more nice videos here to watch
listen listen to the words of three men flying around the moon absolutely
well apollo 8 originally was an earth orbital mission exercising the lunar module but the lunar module was way behind
we had intelligence information that the russians were going to put a man around the moon probably in december of
1968. people in nasa come up with the idea of moving apollo 8 to a lunar orbital
mission why don't we send the command service module of apollo 8 to orbit the moon and we can learn a
lot about the communication system the navigation system how the moon's gravity would affect the
orbiting spacecraft look for suitable landing spots so we had to condense into four months
what usually took a year to 18 months of training everybody was motivated everybody was
dedicated and the basic idea wasn't to beat the russians with the moon that was a political goal that was set
by president kennedy and we were all determined to meet it debated apollo 8 and developed a lot of
attention it filled a big square in preparation for later apollo flights
well i got into the big saturn v this would be the first time that man had actually launched on a saturn v so i
thought to myself after this four months of heavy training like i said you know i'm actually gonna go to the moon the
engines are on four three two one
zero well the saturn v still is the most powerful machine ever made and for example did you get to see any
of these launches at all we had orbited the earth and it must
have been [Music] think there was a tremendous third stage
for a second okay and guidance from the coast
all the way to the moon and after a while you could look back and see the earth getting smaller and smaller
[Music] [Applause]
people on earth tend to call the the far side of the moon the dark side but that's a misnomer on our flight the moon was between the
earth and the sun the far side was lit by the sun and we saw the far side you know we're likely school kids
looking through a candy store window i guess just staring at the unnamed traders as they
slowly passed us by we were busy shooting pictures of the surface for lunar
landing sites for upcoming lunar landings and then
suddenly i looked out the window and here was this gorgeous orb coming up
and i thought holy moly and there over the lunar landscape was
the earth the earth was beautiful it was the only thing in the whole universe that had any color
i had fought to have a long lens and color film i didn't have a light
meter just banged off a dozen or so pictures changing the f-stop i put my thumb
up to the window of the spacecraft and i can completely hide the earth
behind my thumb the earth is a mere speck in the milky
way galaxy look what we have here water and an atmosphere
we're orbiting a star just at the proper distance to absorb that star's energy
god has given mankind a stage upon which
to perform how the play turns out is up to us
for all the people back on earth the crew of apollo 8
has a message that we would like to send to you in the beginning god created the heaven
and the earth and the earth was without form and void
and darkness was upon the face of the deep and the spirit of god moved upon the
face of the waters and god said let there be light
and there was light
a merry christmas and god bless all
[Music] important for america to be the forefront of space exploration
that drives technology one of the important facets of the apollo
not just on the earth but in space
[Music] i really do miss those days
yeah we choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things not because they are easy
but because they are hard t-minus 60 seconds and counting we are
go for apollo 7 at this time
[Music] [Applause]
we have ignition sequence start engines on five four three two
um [Music]
[Applause]
[Music] [Applause] [Music]
from 1969 to 1972 we had you know a total of six moon landings
12 humans walked on the surface of the moon we have elevated the human condition we
have improved human lives we have raised the standard of living for every person on earth
because of space exploration we're going to go back to the moon and
we're going to take what we learned there and we're going to go to mars
oh yeah check it out
not gonna lie it's not exactly a fantastic view
[Music]
well hello everybody this is scott roberts here with the explore scientific and the explore
alliance and this is part two of the 47th global star party
uh with me right now is david levy and simon tang and we'll have some others logging in uh
over the next uh couple of hours uh as we get closer and closer to
the eclipse you know totality of the uh super moon total eclipse
this was also called something else another kind of moon wasn't it um
well it's called a blood moon but i just call it a lunar eclipse like it's supposed to be an eclipse of the moon
oh um no wasn't this called the flower moon or something like that as well the flower moon yes but it doesn't have
to be an eclipse to be called the flower moon no of course right
and so um yeah i mean you know lunar eclipses uh go over
a much slower pace but you know the the whole whole sequence is
beautiful um let's see who we have on with us
and then we'll have we'll have david uh uh he's he's got a a poem that he can
he can recite with us or for us i recognize kim hay from the kingston center of the royal
astronomical society of canada oh yeah
great
andreas nilsson from stockholm says the dream would be to go to cape canaveral and
watch artemis lunar launch when we send people to the moon again
um absolutely the dream for me
is to go outside in a few minutes and see this magnificent eclipse
and it looks like simon's getting some clear sky um at this point this is actually a
picture from what i shot oh i was like wow yeah i i wish it looked as good as this
this is actually i'm gonna do a screen share because uh it looks kind of mineralized or
something that's really cool um let's do this good good to see you good to be on the
same program as you tonight so this is the uh enhanced version that
i took before we ran away and of course i added all the color into it um
by just turning up the saturation etc etc but the big difference here is i tried
to preserve as much of the crater and the impact details as possible um
there you go very nice famous crater you could ever see but you can just see
how how crazy it is all the dust and how much uh particles were just like
thrown across the moon because the gravity is just so incredibly low and then it just coats all over the
areas yeah that have color tremendous impact
too the interesting thing here is though um i can't i can't remember who it was it
was up there i want to say it was marshall uh but when when he was actually up there on the
apollo oh jeez on 13 14 15 16. and this apollo
16 mission where he kicks the dirt and he makes the explanation that the soil was actually orange
and he could actually see it yeah it's because there's no atmosphere that you know
you've got the solar radiation just bombarding the surface of the moon that's bleached it this color over time
but as soon as he turns the soil over for like a better description it's actually orange underneath
hmm is that the reason why they thought the moon was made of cheese
i think they were saying that long before
yeah right now this is this is my current view not not a lot to look at but
interestingly enough um because of the way this is if i do get to see any part of the
eclipse it will have this diffused orange look to it if i can see it but i'm
getting close to the edge of my house and that tree all right i did kind of peek but
i think that uh david wants to make uh his move to go out to his observatory
and i think he was going to read some poetry for us which is great and um
i'm going to turn it over to you to you david thank you scotty yeah actually you're right after i do my
poetic introduction for everybody i am now going to then i will
log off the computer and go outside with my cell phone and reconnect
because we are here to see a lunar eclipse i think there is only one appropriate poem and it's thomas hardy's
famous poem at a lunar eclipse what i love about this poem is the relationship
that what he wrote in 1903 and the the earth he describes is so
similar now well over a century later by shadow
earth from pole to central sea now steels along the moon's meek
shine an even monochrome and curving line of imperturbable serenity
how shall i link such sun cast symmetry with the torn trouble form i know is
vine that profile placid is a brown divine with con
with continents of moral and misery and can immense mortality but throw so
small a shade and heaven's high human scheme be hemmed within the coasts
beyond our complies is such the stellar gauge of earthly show
nation at war with nation brains that team heroes and women fairer
than the skies let's enjoy the eclipse back to you scotty thank you so much
thank you so much and and we are going to we're here um if you've been watching
we're here with simon tang uh who's out in the la region southern california
and uh he does have a view of the moon but through clouds at the moment so
but um as as the uh next couple hours progress we should
have others that are logging on as well i i know that uh
caesar's getting set up in argentina uh down in buenos aires um we have
christopher go should be coming on from the philippines if he's getting clear skies and molly
wakeling up in the bay area of california is attempting to get online as well so
still here yep
we're just gonna leave that now if this was halloween this would
have been perfect
yes here maybe i'll leave it in gallery mode here we go
i'm actually getting people texting me saying hey how's your weather i'm like what's your weather how's your weather
right yeah i keep turning around to see if
i've got any type of a gap and it's just not happening where are you exactly i'm in an area
called canyon country which is not far from a famous location known as vasquez
rocks for those of you who are familiar with this location it's actually a very well
known movie location that was used in dozens of movies and shows such as star
trek uh bill and ted planet of the apes and geez countless westerns okay so
vazquez rocks national area park and agua dulce california right pretty much
yeah yeah i'm just below aguero dolce david garcia's uh messaging saying
what's up scott debbie roberts i'm out in hawaii wishing i still have my 127 carbon fiber yeah we're wishing you had
it set up too that you know i i don't know if it's clear over there in hawaii but
it would be uh it would be great
did you even take a nap scott or did you you know what happened simon is uh i got
notices to update my computer so i go okay i'll update the computer
both of my it took three hours about three hours to get my computers all set up i was still
struggling with it right to the very end of course this reconfigured everything so i had to go back and
and set it all back up again of course it does and uh yeah fun
so i thought well i could but i did get a shower i did i got a shower brushed my teeth
you know so yeah i would i snuck out and got
coles junior oh if only they delivered
and had veg hamburgers uh i think they do now but they're not the
greatest things in the world this particular one is what uh they call it a green burrito as well as say
carl's jr so you have other choices oh i see
david says i'm imaging with my inferior setup but we are in the sweet spot here with the eclipse on that plate
getting the asi so david if you would like to join us uh send me an email to s at
explorescientific.com i'll be waiting here and we'll
give you the logon so that you can broadcast from hawaii
it looks real dramatic with the clouds going across it you know i'm not going to lie if if it
was going through the uh eclipse now it would look ten times better i mean
you get an idea of the coloration if anything yeah
and how many how many do you count how many lunar eclipses you've seen
how many have i seen this will be well i technically won't see this one but it will be my third one
your third one okay the first the first one oh gee that was a while ago this was
before i actually got into imaging or any of that kind of stuff it was just something i looked up put and saw because it was on the news and i was
like all right fine i'll look at it and like oh that's cool that's cool exactly and then that was
the that was a time where people had the mars hoax where they said mars
was making its closest approach to earth oh my gosh and they tricked people into thinking
that the moon was mars and it was really that big yeah right oh that's the planet wow look
at the moon i mean mars i mean i don't know what i'm talking about but
you know how many people believed it was just unreal so david's now
logging in from his observatory
i hear a dog barking at the moon oh there's always a dog barking in this
area as long as that dog's barking it means i'm not being loud so that's fine
all right it's kind of strange that the way i'm
looking at it with my own eye it looks so much cooler because of
the way that you see the structure of the clouds and everything but obviously this camera if i took the
barlow away you could probably get an idea of what i'm seeing but i'm not going to start messing with this now because um
this whole system is all balanced for that yeah if i stop messing now i'll never
get it back together again in time
but it does look pretty cool it does look cool you can see start to see some surface
detail now believe it or not in fact i can see tycho again okay
so let's look at our schedule here for the uh eclipse
i think it gets to the number at three something so that's another what 20
something plus minutes away for our perspective it will just look like a dimming of the moon
um before it even starts to go any shades of any color whatsoever like i said we
won't see anything or i won't see anything because of the way the diffusion of the cloud works
only until the eclipse itself begins would we start picking up any shades of red
so your local time right now is uh what two 243 43
they're saying 2 45 so in about three minutes you're gonna
that's when it would actually start does it look a little darker at the top
or is that my imagination or is that clouds i'm still debating if
that's a cloud or not i'm waiting for that one to drift past because you can see the clouds drifting past in real time
yeah but it looks like i've got a teeny tiny gap just to mess with me
[Laughter] although having said that i just realized this is technically
upside down from what i can tell if i unflip everything this should be the
correct orientation there you go that does look darker
is tycho in the wrong place yes it is hold on so that's the rabbit in the moon no you
had it right
there you go hold on i need to
at least look at the direction of the rabbit ears ah yeah yeah here we go sorry i was looking at the wrong part
you know what now you say that i'm starting to think the bottom half really is starting to get a bit dim because it looks like there's a chunk missing
yeah maybe you can uh slow down a little bit
yup no it really is happening yeah it's starting to happen
yeah we can um let me do a screen share so you guys get the full resolution okay let me start that screen share
sure okay now you can see the full resolution
yeah that we definitely have um the eclipse starting because you can see the bottom
has been somebody's taking a bite out of it almost pekka tells me we we have this ongoing
thing i always say i see the rabbit in the moon pekka says he sees finland on the moon
yeah it's definitely getting darker there
it is so nice that you've said uh you've got your rig set up and you've kind of sacrificed your night
here because there's a lot of people around the world that are not able to see this uh due to clouds or whatever
circumstance they might have you know to think i was going to go down to malibu um to try and do this
because i would have had a prime spot and it would have been near unobstructed because obviously the
only thing in my way at that point would have been the ocean but if it's cloudy like this
then it would have been just wall i'd have been walled in and we would have been looking at the side of somebody's
house pharaoh's house to be exact
but yeah no i've got a friend of mine who is in where is he
mount whitney he just sent me some images so or sent
me a image and he's completely clear right now
is it oh yeah mount whitney sure it was looking a bit um hit and miss at
first and then he just sent me one of his shots and i was like oh wow but he's got so many scopes up
there he's um how many scopes did he take with him i think it's like four
actually i should turn off the auto white balance otherwise we will never we'll never know if it goes red
so what we're gonna i'm this is our official by the way guys this is not really
yeah i've just made it look more red just to give you an idea of what we're going to expect so this will be a rough
uh representation of what we're gonna see hopefully
so obviously because of all the clouds it's going to have this crazy diffused funky look to it i see the earth's
shadow is just taking a big bite out of the moon now oh yeah it's definitely there we were just talking about that
i'm just turning the uh white balance back to the way it should really be right now not
a fake false color thing
if you've just tuned in um uh you are watching uh simon tang's uh
set up in southern california uh you can see as as the
the moon behind clouds he's got partially a partial view but you can see the
shadow starting to march across the surface of the moon and david levy is with us as
well he's in his observatory checking out the moon
um and i'm here in springdale arkansas in my office running the live stream
um but uh you know i for fun i looked up the
path of the eclipse in 2024 and it is literally outside your doorstep
you know for the solar eclipse uh scott what's that for the solar eclipse
in 2024 it is literally outside your doorstep it is but it's arkansas you know so
that's a problem in itself um i mean weather is a real hit or miss
here but let me see
we can actually see some color starting to take on now
am imagining something or do the clouds just freeze in position
oh no i light there he goes drifting across
so how's david doing there hiding around in the background
i don't know if he can hear us david do you hear us i'm
in a pretty good view right between the clouds oh okay yeah
kind of tempted to go get my skills camera just to take a couple of shots of this because
partial phase
between i'll be right back i'm gonna grab my camera i heard mike wiesner has a much
cloudier sky just a little north of here
behind me is jupiter they
provided a lovely uh car party just a few but they're both up in the southeast
right now
great
david garcia says david levy that's awesome growing up shoemaker levy 9 was a giant
catalyst for me in this hobby and i just like uh just like this week
uh was geeking out over a co-worker that has a that has levy as a last
name and making sure he was into astro he said this
is awesome that's kind of a fairly decent last name to have yeah i
would say some yeah i'd say so but it's a fun last name yeah
and uh let's see jupiter is beautiful in the southeast right now
jupiter is my favorite planet by the way i've heard that
and not because of what happened to jupiter no so much was that it was the first
thing i looked at through a telescope i see september the 1st 1960 with a
three and a half inch reflector and uh whenever i get a new telescope
first light is almost always on jupiter
including including eureka the 12-inch that i just got from explorer scientific
gave a beautiful view of jupiter just uh just before the star party we had the last in 2019
and i've been using that telescope ever since i just loved
and uh david garcia is in hawaii today
i think i have clear skies i think he's got clear skies oh good for him he's going to get the
full story of this lovely eclipse
so
uh
and there is jupiter
with four moons and a star there
it's one of the most interesting views of jupiter i've ever had
sure looks like five moons but uh but there's four moons and an extra star
beautiful so armando lee from the philippines is
saying the moon's going to rise in about 13 minutes
i hope it's clear yeah me too because you're gonna see a
beautiful
okay sorry about that
well as you can see scott there is a big chunk of the moon missing now
it is that that's a decent uh live view of the
moon right there for sure oh yeah there's a there's a really nice gap right now i think
somebody up there heard me and says like oh simon's actually out partly
you know what'd be really interesting to work out is um obviously that's the shadow of the moon but what part of the world is that at the
bottom there
rico
so
so
um oh that's a good thing
it's kind of about what i'm seeing except the angle is different yeah uh the orientation of my camera
is is off um i had it rotated in this particular fashion
because that was basically my expectation of it i wanted to kind of sweep from the bottom to the top i could rotate here if
i wanted to but i don't want to mess with it right it was astro bite is that caesar no that's that's me out
in hawaii it's david garcia oh david how are you man i'm doing well man good good talking to
you the navy's been keeping me super busy so i haven't put enough uh
put enough attention on my website or anything but uh i'm out here trying to capture it and
disguise are these guys are actually really clear which i'm super excited about um that's awesome
but i'm just using the little kind of asi setup right now to just push the video isn't that cool that is a
cool device oh yeah
yeah i'm gonna i'm hoping to capture some stuff once it starts turning kind of like reddish and
um i got a little board so i was shooting m8 as well but uh the setup here i have
uh patio lights that are just on constantly so um it's actually kind of a nice little
backyard to do astro in um with the bright set of filters of course but
um loving it out here if it weren't for the for everything going on man i'd be like you gotta come out
oh sure sure now you are on the big island or where are you no i'm right here on oahu
so filters are filters are my friend but uh yeah i'm stationed at pearl harbor so oh you know i love hawaii it's great so
i'll be back out there again oh let me let me know what you're coming through
one thing i'd like to point out is the sky is dark and pretty rapidly
right early to easily see fourth by two stars
first youtube
this is fun yeah this is great fun i'm loving this
there are a lot of clouds right now but the uh the bay areas of the sky that are clear are showing more and more stars
yeah it's weird i've got a big opening here that just kind of opened up the rest of the cloud i mean the rest of the sky is just
you're getting lucky simon
i think there's some great stories that people have told about um the eclipses i think they were up in
carbondale and they were getting killed by all the clouds and then
right when totality was about to happen the clouds just kind of broke away and people could see totality actually
happening and soon as soon as it got to this point i didn't give it about i don't know 10 15
seconds of clouds okay show's over
you know the funny thing is the unsuspecting person they wouldn't believe that it was a full moon though just like
that's just you know half moon or whatever it is
hey caesar cesar brawler is uh tuning in from buenos aires argentina
and it looks like we're on his uh yes are we on your patio there
is a cloudy caesar yes but i think that this
like today show us [Music] maxi that we have clouds
that are moving and i think that maybe in a few minutes
i can i can send you some pictures of the moon
great let me try yes yes i'm i i am connected i have a camera
and well maybe maybe a few minutes i can i can get some pictures
start a live image i was trying to explain to my wife cesar
why why you are your nickname is hundred mile per hour caesar [Laughter]
yeah sorry about the noise [Laughter]
more than once you've been either up on your patio or certainly during the eclipse the total solar eclipse you were
in all that wind but you delivered we got to see the live solar eclipse from argentina
yeah patagonia it was awesome what's up was also the the wind the patagonia is
incredible it's something that is the weather in patagonia is
so special and well i i try in few minutes if i can get
some image actually it's cloudy but maybe i have something to show you
okay all right and in case you don't know uh we've got also david garcia on with
us in oahu uh you know hawaii and um and then simon of course from
the la area
[Music]
rebecca says discovery science is not broadcasting this but guess what explore scientific is
you got a really clear view out there david
oh yeah i'm i'm currently loving it yeah um the funny story behind that is
um my wife and i decided to buy a home out here and found the perfect home and it was super
clear i kind of convinced her to drive up to where the house was about five times before we bought it to make sure it had
clear skies uh that was probably the only five clear skies of the whole year for that so tonight's
been awesome but normally it's super cloudy here so cloudy oh yeah so it's right by one of the
ridges but um it's it's agreeable tonight so i'm loving it yeah it's awesome
so where do the amateur astronomers uh go on um on oahu
where did they live um yeah so when i first got here the amateur astronomer club that they
have here on the island is actually really strong and really awesome it's open to everybody there's no fee uh
to just come and enjoy the star parties there's membership for doing that but
there's an airstrip that gets shut down after dark and about twice a month
it's open to everybody to go out there and set up and it's on closer to the north shore of
oahu it's it's actually pretty good time but i was spoiled by san diego and
having access to opt so i wasn't ready to to bring batteries and all that um out
here so um right yeah
uh simon looks like he oh you switched uh
did you switch scopes
he heard me
[Music]
huh
if you're just now watching you are watching the 47th global star party
with live views right now in two different parts of the world we've got a live view of the super moon
total eclipse tonight from uh the la area but with
simon tang and then david garcia is uh in oahu hawaii uh where he's got a nice clear
sky there um we did have a lot of clouds over with on you know where simon is set up
but it's clearing off more and more and we've got a nice march of the eclipse going on
uh cesar brolo is on with us as well he's uh he is um setting up
in buenos aires argentina and then i see tim hunter is on
watching in the background there david levy is at the jarnak observatory so
i thought i'd remove the barlow real quickly um so it's not you know so zoomed in
don't suppose you know which edge of the earth this is um scott what's that the
what side of the earth is creating this edge i don't know i'd have to wrap my head
around that one actually i might be able to work it out
yes
the round edge debbie nolte has got he's got is weeping
the cloud is coming at her right now uh janet engel says i can see it clearly
from from suenza am i pronouncing that right
ecuador steve hauser he says to a rainy morning
in southeast idaho thanks for the party scott yeah thanks to all of them that are
that are doing this i just hooked up the wires that's all
i'm determined to work this out hold on one second
there's maps
okay so we need to get the equator line in the middle since rome is
what time is it in rome right now it's uh technically it's 12 o'clock so if i get it roughly middle
hey david david oh
all right which david the the real one or the random naval david
there's two um well it makes no difference so here's a question for everybody which
way um is the earth rotating as clockwise right
well let's get the answer here
oh geez i should know stuff like this uh yeah because the sun comes up in the east and sets in the west yes it's
clockwise so but what which edge of the earth are we seeing that's what
i'm trying to cause in the shadow yeah that's what i'm trying to work out because it can only be two answers
it's either india's shadow or it's um south america's shadow or brazil's
shadow all right let's work that part out i
need oh hold on a second doesn't google us
show you the view from the moon there are visualizations of um
of this let's see i don't even know how to do this i'll
run instead of my camera here i'll run this this is b-roll
of um the super moon event
oh oh oh you can't rewind can you oh no it's still the same thing hold on
ah stop moving
no i think we're seeing the um the site from south america scott what's that i think it's south
america oh well south america okay sorry i'm not paying attention and then just
notice that the moon almost disappeared out of view let's see we have debbie nolte watching
from moreno victoria australia you guys have a better view
pekka says 10th of june we'll have a partial solar eclipse and the eclipse starts here
at 11 42 and ends at 1407.
they'll have a 38 coverage that's in stockholm
the video that that i'm sharing it with you is a b-roll from nasa
that i think that some scientists will be kind of talking over as they
broadcast
i've got roughly 40 minutes worth of viewing time left before it hits that stupid tree
yeah i'm pretty sure it's the shadow of um south america
hmm i can't tell if i'm going behind something or if it's just clouds
no it's clouds good
yeah that's clouds
look at this detail of the moon of the lunar reconnaissance orbiter it's
beautiful
looks like being told that our youtube feed is frozen for some reason
let's check
um
yeah i just checked our other feeds are
okay so david garcia how do you have your are
you setting up your ipad like on a looks like a coffee cup or something
yeah i have um the ipad that this zoom meeting is running on on
top of a pelican case looking at the cell phone that i'm running the zwa uh zwo
air on right yeah impromptu video streaming yeah
the big bite out of the moon now i'm pretty much getting killed by the
clouds again
it would be so cool to see uh eclipse of the uh sun from the earth on the moon
that's about where we are right well went over really quick
i think we're going to see some cool um imagery from lro from this eclipse as
well
i just got a ton of clouds that just rolled in
uh not as much as simon [Laughter]
yeah i'm really fighting it right now oh look at that
oh boy
yellow fuzz is l.a
one of the questions they threw up there and in that nasa video is why does the moon turn red during
an eclipse it's um when the moon is fully in
earth's shadow a little bit of the light of earth sun rises and sun sets
on the disk of the planet falls on the surface of the moon because the light waves are stretched
out they look red uh when this uh you know when the red light strikes the moon's surface it also
appears red so that's the answer plus the earth's atmosphere filters out
um a lot of that light and only allows the red light to pass through anyway right oh look it smalls
yes not the moon [Laughter] so it was so funny you you had mentioned
earlier simon about the um uh you know the hoax email
that would come out almost every august like clockwork that the moon is going or that mars is
going to be as big as the full moon in the sky right and uh
this this i i would get bombarded i remember with emails uh you know alerting me
that this was going to happen for my all my friends that would get the email scott did you know
you know uh either is it that time of year again
oh i get all sorts of messages from people yes my favorite one is uh the doom and gloom
with all the uh solar flares and things like that and like oh yeah at the end of the world
yeah talking to the guy that stares at the sun non-stop i'll know if we're gonna die or not
actually i thought it was the moon was red because of dust in the earth's atmosphere that makes
the shadow reddish and that leads us to the dungeon scale
[Music] that gives us different uh layers of
eclipse whether the moon is very dark or very bright
yes that's all i've got right now
harold locke is saying that he's got the same view you do uh simon i think a lot of people do
right now san diego there is that view though that crater that's
awesome there is a band coming up uh it's about three minutes out i think
hard to tell because i don't know where the moon
isn't the sun coming up for you right now scott well birds are certainly chirping like
crazy out there no it's still dark oh here's what
m8 looked like about 20 minutes ago nice yeah very nice
so here's okay let me stop this video here at mid eclipse now you're seeing
you're seeing the sunrises and sunsets okay of the of the earth
as we move so this is the view from the moon
so this is one of the explanations of why the um the uh
the moon looks red is because the light falling on the moon is red color
from the earth but another reason why uh probably is
dust similar to like you know the dust extinction we in these long
uh wavelengths of light you know red light are uh definitely uh
creating that effect so caesar it looks like daytime wherever you are
it looks like he's frozen now i think he is oh no he's back here is
this day now and i have a picture i took a picture chest
oh you did did you get it yes yes i i can tell you let me yeah when i search
that's fine once you go ahead and share that
fast as possible then it shares green pictures
now i have one more [Music]
and because i don't know but my live stream
is impossible unable to to start but yeah
yeah but you you got something
that's right that's right let me see if um
[Music]
okay [Music]
because i i i watching my camera like
like a folder only
the last picture that i took [Music] and i share with you the city
[Music] as soon as possible story
[Music] okay [Music]
now well
[Music]
okay this is what's now oh you got it yeah uh yeah it's the only thing because
the clouds are up again
it's a sequence of few pictures and but we're right something
is the only thing where you can see the city and you can see
that this the shadow is it's a case
[Music] it's the only one thing that i could
make this morning
i mean right yes it's it's high here and it's cold
it's really cloudy now it's the days days but
i have more clouds in in the west that in the east it's you know sometimes
let me see if i have another one yes but a sequence of
pictures that i i took uh while was
and a little open a little clear between the clouds scott
is it's all that i have to today
but it's beaut actually it's a beautiful picture it's nice yeah yes it's nice yes this was my
my original it was my idea [Music] mega live stream please see the
close-up of the blue sorry christopher i i don't
i sorry i just came in 6 33
yeah let's let's see it um all right let's um let's uh
uh caesar if you can then share your your view there yeah
yes i can i can uh it's a let me
yeah i can do it as well yeah
sorry i was just setting things up and uh the moon just cleared the clouds
this is my my setting with the camera
and this is the place where i am
and we got armando lee in the philippines hello everyone christopher go in the
philippines caesar's showing his uh viewing platform
yes right yeah yeah david garcia
oh you did okay all right let's check earlier shots uh before i turn on this video my
cameron i'm observing from nearby southern province from the from metro manila i'm in laguna right
now and uh the mountains you see in the photos are one of the nearest mountains by metro
manila that's around 50 kilometers away south of metro manila
so the moon just rose between two mountains from our view here mount
bana and mount makili you can see that in the still photos like
in your message chris i see a photo of your stellar view 70. um can i share now i
can yeah absolutely yep
oh wow okay
it's kind of difficult to control the brightness
this uh there's a little cloud over the moon yeah
i'm doing some capture right now but let's see you can see the
right
yeah you can see the moon now yes it's getting there
let me do some focusing
the line is very low here it's about 15 to 14 degrees at 12 degrees right now
that's a good question
you can also see the brightness variation yes the edge is uh pretty bright
i'm doing capture now it became it becomes black and white whenever i do a capture because it's in raw mode
it captures in raw mode i'll process this later it takes about 20
minutes to process each image
that's great though you get a nice clear view it looks like there's a little haze in the lower
horizon and that's basically why we're seeing
that color variation because it's still pretty low in the sky
yeah you're definitely going to see more than i am seeing right now
sorry about that my back is that who went behind you there what
is that the grand canyon behind you yeah right i was gonna say it's funny
how he's actually in darkness but he's got a picture of him in broad daylight behind him
yeah right my view is now completely gone oh
well in a few minutes this is the magic of global star party where we can switch
locations to get clear skies yeah it's
also it's going to be totally in about 20 minutes yeah is it 7 30 minutes
30 minutes from now the brightness variation is difficult for the image
maybe the the the national tv i send the the broadcasting
link to the national tv okay yes to transmit to transmit some
pictures uh because when the silence is cloudy yeah maybe maybe i'll tell you later if
if we appear we we was watching in national tv
telefake channel maybe maybe we uh it's pretty dream right now
we're averaging at 1 over 10 seconds now
we can with a naked eye you can see the reddish [Music] dark part now
get higher
let's see people
[Music]
[Music]
so absolutely amazing amazing
wow
beautiful you can still see the haze unfortunately
and it's amazing in hands of christopher go that is one of the best uh planetary
astrophotographers that that i know that they follow his pictures is christopher is
one of the best oh yeah i'm just playing around
that's why you're one of the best yeah really it's a pleasure
well i i am leave now i'm connecting
later because i am freezing it's five degrees oh it's funny because
you guys are freezing i'm
[Music]
nice nice probably around 35 right now oh only 3.5 right now weltering
yeah by only hey simon how are you i i'm good uh to be honest i'm
i'm actually the world's best cloud photographer right now
well it's in a speciality too
let's take some images
good morning good morning molly
i have excellent views to share whenever you guys see me
all right here we are
hey chris let's uh let's uh let molly share for a moment here no problem okay
um you can just share your screen molly oh i'm i'm um i'm using uh streamlabs all right
all right look then you gotta keep talking okay um let's see
yeah there it is okay uh so um here in my
yard uh in the san francisco bay area it is 3 45 in the morning
but alas i i have my uh my ring set up outside and i'm removing into it from
my office inside which is great because i can stay warm although it's actually pretty nice
outside right now it's uh 50 degrees according to my weather station so that's uh not too
bad um yeah so we are deep inside of the partial or yeah the partial phase
right now and it's cool because this if you went outside earlier you saw the uh but the moon was was full and also
extremely bright and one of those really really bright pullmans and now it's almost completely gobbled
up by the earth's shadow which looks pretty cool right now so i went outside to go re-center the moon
because my skywatcher star adventure doesn't always track the best or maybe i
don't have it perfectly polar aligned or whatever but now it's back in the center um
yeah so in about what is it about half an hour from now we'll be inside the full phase and we'll get that cool
blood moon that the news media looks so excited right
that's when the moon turns into mars yeah i have an excellent picture of that
yeah you know maybe that's what they were talking about and they said mars is going to be the size of the moon was just uh
a lunar eclipse or something yeah so i'm using backyard nikon here
which is a cool piece of software runs about 50 bucks
and has a lot of really useful functions for doing astrophotography with the dslr
i've got my nikon d5300 out there because i well it's clear i didn't want to take
one of my astro cameras off their rigs to do this so using my dslr instead
and um it has all kinds of useful functions like i can see a live view on my laptop screen
instead of on the little flip screen on my camera which makes focusing a lot easier
it actually now the new version has a plate solver involved in it and can also communicate
via ask on to your mount so it has some of the features that
my secret generator pro has but can work there's there's a canon version of this
as well and i can not run like a target changing sequence
but a sequence on a single target that has as many as a hundred events
so this is what i use for solar eclipses and lunar eclipses and um uh makes it really easy to
automate my dslr and then i can work out the timings precisely
and take all the right exposures and whatnot so and then i don't have to have my hands on it changing exposures
all the time and i can do things like broadcast and if it's solar eclipse you know enjoy it so
it's a nice piece of software
but yeah we're waiting for photos
i guess it's uh i guess it's cold in argentina cesar brawler says he's getting off his
rooftop now oh yeah yeah b dude do i'm using chrome
remote desktop to access my my tablet outside which is really nice and uh it's free
and it works really well and it's cross-platform i can access my my tablet from my phone which is really
cool so um i don't have to be cold i can sit inside here in my nice cozy
house nice by the way guys have an excellent noon
afternoon we're getting there how does it look now
from your side christopher
oh look at that maybe i should squeak in a couple longer exposures in there too
to start getting some of that
idea this is a one second exposure
okay one second that's a it's a long exposure for the moon isn't it
yeah i was uh i so i used wow look at
that nice so i used uh so uh fred espinac aka mr eclipse
has a uh he's got a lot of resources on his website and one of them is a table of exposure
times for dslrs to image lunar eclipses and you look at the table and see what
your f value is and what your iso is and then it lists out the exposure times
you need for each of the different phases and depending on on how deep the lunar eclipse is there's
exposures as long as 30 seconds for the really dim the danger number
it's called and um so yeah it was weird putting in like 15
second 30 second exposures into my sequence because normally the moon is very bright and you need
very short exposures to image it so it's um but
it can get very very dark during a lunar eclipse and those longer exposures show that cool
red color that christopher go is getting awesome it's a pleasure to be in the same room as christopher go this is cool
right why i'm just your average guy here
everybody that's had a chance to meet you chris knows that you're a special
guy i'm just taking uh different exposures now of different places probably later on we
can [Music]
access
[Music]
i'm gonna modify my sequence a bit to take some longer ones at this point
as well yeah we're gonna need long exposure for this for my case because i'm
i have a little haze over the moon but overall it's about it's uh 80 80 percent clear here
nice oh look it looks like venus now
[Music] let's see um simon can you say hi to jupiter for me
yeah oh yeah that's what that is over there yeah venus that's my favorite planet how
can you no i'm uh i'm looking at jupiter now i i
looked up and i was like i don't remember a bright star being there it's like wait a minute
i'm not going to turn around and say i've got a fantastic view i've just got a pile of fuzzy lights right now
here we go
actually easier to do it this way
but it looks nice we're getting there yeah
so what's the weather for some of you guys for me it's like completely sucked in
here for a very brief time i could see like moonlight through
clouds but no i couldn't even see a desk that's unfortunate
simon what happened to sandy california um sunny california became cloudy
california [Laughter] it's clear here
i think north once you get past a certain point i think fresno was um the the point where anybody above
fresno would have somewhat clearer skies okay okay guys i'm gonna pick a dark dark print
someone was mentioning like a uh exposure chart for photographing the lunar eclipse
people are asking what i can um yeah um let me go let me go re-find it
um uh but anyway that exposure thing um you know it depends on a lot of
factors so um [Music] you know with the dslr the best thing is
just look at the you know the results um and like film before uh you know we have a lot of factors
like clouds haze uh you know uh atmospheric extinction
uh with uh dslr uh just take a photograph that you have you have time to check out how
it looks if it needs more exposure you can add more exposure or if it needs less then you can you
know get less exposure um i would not suggest you know using a
chart as if it's something set in stone uh this is a guideline play around yeah i think uh
i would suggest you to start with one second and if you think it needs more then you push more or if it's
too bright then you push less uh you know you have to play with iso also so uh you know it's it's it's not
something that you can just use a chart with and with a dslr where you can really have the live feed
um you know you have to look uh you can see what's going on um it's not a problem anymore so
just just check whether you know you got the right exposure with you then
uh from there you can get a hang we have 18 minutes of totality so there's a lot of time i have had
really good experience with both his his solar and his lunar eclipse tables
with the exposure times being pretty spot on uh i mean obviously some some haze might might
change these but um it does have uh the different iso values in there and
uh yeah so certainly double check as it's going and make sure that it is working for you but yeah i i
found his table to be really accurate
i posted a link for it uh in the uh in the chat on youtube and um
oh it's early what was i going to say um i forgot what i was going to say i'll
come back oh somebody mentioned
um uh somebody mentioned that those long exposures can cause you might see movement and
that yeah that's that's true depending on your focal length um i'm using a star tracker
set to to lunar uh uh move uh
set to lunar speed so that i can take even more even longer exposures during
totality and won't see any movement in the moon because i'm tracking it so um using a little star tracker or
mounting on top of your telescope or whatever works is a good way to get around that
actually um i have to say this um you know the moon rate on your tracker now one thing about the moon the
rate is variable um i learned it the hard way because um i also take images to very high
resolution in the moon i would suggest you just keep on using uh sidereel time
that's what i'm used to seeing right now uh besides uh i think the maximum exposure
you'll probably ever go is about three to four seconds that's not gonna make a lot of difference uh right now i'm
doing one second exposure with a gain of about 35 db
so um [Music] just uh make sure you have a tracker
uh especially for total uh lunar eclipse because especially when the eclipse is a bit dark uh you'll
probably need uh you know to take longer exposures
uh it's getting there now guys so but you can see it's uh uh mostly red now
beautiful i'm gonna shift to longer exposure as this thing gets uh let's get underway
but uh you can see the details on the moon this is just 50 percent um you can go high 100
you can see the craters here
it's a good thing that i decided to use this because with a dslr i don't think they can like you yeah i love that you're doing
it chris i've got this up uh live uh of course i'm on a 50 inch screen in
front of me so i've got i've got a good view
[Music] i hope this talks well
so we're about eight minutes from totality oh we're getting there right
so those of you who are watching uh try to share this with your friends
um groups that you belong to on facebook or
you know this is an outreach event and a lot of areas are cloudy or people are
unable to you know lots of people are unable to see this so
with your help we can get more people to see it you know of course
i'm using 60-second exposure you know so um you know with eight minutes to go i don't think
the you know the north edge is gonna get really dark it's gonna be
like this so uh let's
[Music] let's uh change the longer exposure
let's see three seconds
yeah that's cool i think this is too long
we're getting there
guess what i can see jupiter
yeah in addition to the lunar eclipse imaging i'm doing i've also got my um my
backyard rigs up and running i'm getting some nice oxygen frames
on the eagle nebula on my eight inch mccassigrain out in the backyard do you guys want to
see jupiter real quick yes please all right uh chris can you stop sharing your screen for a brief
moment
wow there it is there it is jupiter yeah
i'll get it tomorrow i'll get it tomorrow yeah i was thinking about uh my my imaging sequence is going to end
in about five minutes here as astronomical dawn begins so i was thinking about slewing over to
jupiter on my schmidt cassegrain and nabbing my first video of the year of it so
i think i might have to do that can't tell if that's the red spot or not ah that's a good question let me let me
pull it up and skype safari and see what we've got here
jupiter hey we've got lots of beans
right let's see uh yep we have red spot right now what is the red spot
you should have uh all four of its moons not in eclipse or
shadow uh i'd have to get a bigger frame for that
hold on let's go to this i'm not used to that that's too tiny for me
yeah yeah for me to do it properly i would need to remove the
the focal reducer on my on my c8 but it's a lot of work to do that so i'll save that for another
wow the moon's excellent now oh yeah i see it i can have a dark spring for a while
yeah i've got all four moons here yay yeah io is the one that's real close
all right i'm gonna stop sharing so we can go back to your guys's view because it's probably why we're here it's why we're here it is getting
exactly i'm taking some dark frames right now but the view is stunning
in uh um uh you can see that oh yeah look at this
okay let me share my screen now and this is what i have now
there you go wow beautiful you're getting there
uh i may have to use three seconds
um
i'm going to dart outside to look with my eyes that's right yeah
it's gonna be yeah
well it's about uh yeah four minutes to totality and uh yeah
it's kind of bright
one second isn't enough now it's pretty dark
all right scott i'm going to pack everything up because um this wall of are you clouded out yeah this
wall of gray is just getting worse yeah and i can feel the uh humidity
climbing yeah that's right you're going to get soggy it's going to work thank you very much
thank you for for uh sharing the live views and uh you know kicking this off with david
levy as we started the program so yeah i went very nicely as i possibly
could yeah i'm gonna contact you because i'll be in l.a for about a month
this summer oh okay yeah no totally i'll i'll be imaging i might borrow some
cameras i don't want to bring it from here oh yeah no i've i've got just as many things and we can grab stuff from the
store as well so i'm sure pharaoh will be twitching to say hi okay wonderful
we're getting there all right have a good morning everybody enjoy the rest of the eclipse and i'm
going to pack up alrighty thanks buddy all right i'll see you guys on the next
one all right thanks simon take care good morning
this is great um yes look at look at this ah this is so
nice
yeah i uh i woke up this morning and um my cats are very confused why i'm up so
early and they they think they want food even though it's
several hours too early for them
the cats are pretty smart aren't they i mean you know yeah but they're also really like food
they'll take any excuse to uh to to have me think that it's time to feed them but
i say they're leaving me alone right now so maybe one minute one minute
yeah i can see that that bright spot starting to get smaller and smaller from the naked eye oh yeah
it's almost done but uh with the camera it's still pretty bright
[Music]
so we're about 50 seconds out something like that my my view is going to go black and
white it captures in raw mode so it's uh it becomes monochrome
all right so my my deep sky telescope is done for the night look at that
jupiter yeah beautiful nice
there we go yeah we should be right at totality right now we're in totality
all the cheers and shout outs going on for much longer
i'm gonna push up to three seconds now i'm doing the lunar eclipse happy dance
back here yeah i'm at i'm at five seconds now uh
oh there's a nice star in the field as well oh that looks
gorgeous uh let's switch to molly's live view
here we'll bounce back and forth
yeah so um one of my one of the things i like about the about
lunar eclipses is um when you look at the single frames you can kind of see that it's bright fading to dark and then if you
look at a series of frames even across the the totality phase you can see the shadow
moving across the moon which is really cool um so i i'll be i'll be putting together
some cool like multi-frame images to and probably a gif as well
to show that shadow moving across the moon um you really kind of get the sense that
uh the earth is round for example and i kind of kind of what's happening
with the geometry of the earth and the moon when you can see that shadow move across
it so that'll make some cool images
very cool i'm currently got five second exposures running i didn't mention before i am using a 300
millimeter lens um this lens has a little bit of chromatic aberrations you can you
might be able to see across the top there but it's my longest focal length lens that's not
a telescope and i have a a couple of telescopes and i'm
testing for optical structures that are these little refractors that are longer but they're a little heavy for the sky
watcher to be able to connect to you very well well i mean the skywatcher can handle the way you can handle it too or the
star adventure i should say um can handle up to 11 pounds but um while i yes i can balance it in right
ascension uh in declination it's only got that one quarter 20 screw up there and it uh it
tends to kind of slide around and you can't really you can't balance it in deck so
yeah the best setup uh at least until i figure out some kind of dovetail system for it
is uh with it with a camera lens instead so i'm at 300
millimeters i get a fair amount of detail i'm zoomed in right now i zoom um back out
you got a nice comment we got a nice comment from kim hey awesome job everyone this has been great
for everyone who does not get to see this great event so yeah where kim is writing from but
thank you very much yeah um i've got a couple stars in here
too which is which is cool kind of adds some some nice context to the image um
let's see what are those two book davey says i've been bouncing
around different channels everybody from here to australia are watching and imaging and having fun awesome
ah so the moon is in is in um uh scorpius right now
so the two stars there are let's see what's my field of view
i can't tell exactly which one's off to think about it a little bit with the geometry of the image but um yeah some
of the brighter stars in in scorpius uh right now it's it's just to be
to the right of antares and and the milky way even though i can't
see the the milky way from here in the bay area it's too light polluted
but um yeah it's not not too far away from from antares and friends
same in here yeah unfortunately so i have a high a high background light level not just because of light
pollution but because there's a street light across the street my neighbors have some have a i have some
bright lights and uh and i'm in a part of my yard that's less well shielded than where my
telescopes are located at but um and then of course my front porch light
is on as well but i'm gonna i'm gonna leave that one on but yeah a little bit of um
of uh background light there but nothing a little tweaking of the curves and kicks inside
excuse me um so for my location maximum eclipse
is uh at 4 18. so it's about five minutes from now
how's your view uh coming along on uh in in uh philippines chris
perfect i'm taking immediate now uh let me take a dark train and uh we'll switch to
i'm using a
see i'm gonna there you go wow look at that yep
gorgeous interesting to see it from here to from one side of the earth to the
other you know
you can see a star uh following right yeah the moon
so i think this thing is a star here
maybe we'll get another meteor crash this this year
that'd be cool uh will young um uh he got a
really awesome picture of uh of that meteor crashing into the moon um
actually i think he has a video uh uh at the last lunar eclipse and i
checked through my frames and it was between frames for me because i wasn't doing live video um
so i missed out which was too bad but uh it was cool to see other people's
images and videos
[Music] what is that grid pattern that we see over the moon
yeah because i'm using a color camera so you know it's uh it's the bare grid i see
i'm gonna have saturn up in my view here momentarily you can see some clouds
you can see some dark variation that's the clouds
how would you how would you rate your seeing tonight chris uh
i can't really say because when you see a 70 millimeter telescope and
seeing won't really affect this focal length it's not a problem
but uh with the northeast uh wind uh i think the scene will be around 18 15
degrees so it's quite low okay one minute from totality i'm gonna take this is the mid-eclipse
shot mid totality for a minute left
the nitto garden says nice photos even for those who can watch the eclipse live
unfortunately uh the view from the if you look at the moon you cannot really see anything red
probably because um it's low and uh you know there's this
there's a haze and cloud just a thin ring ah can you see the the red moon
i can see oh or it's my eyes i'm gonna pop outside and i'm gonna go
pop outside and take a look visually i'll be back in a second
okay can you call vincent and
i'm calling my kids now to watch
beautiful
is this really interesting that kind of very darkish edge on one side and then
the brighter and that color variation going across
really cool i have a problem here i'm having a lot
of bugs i cut you i have difficulty even opening
my mouth oh really jeez
when we went to mount wilson uh for one of our trips the you know to do one of the tours that we
had arranged um they gave us a uh netting that just went over our heads you know
because they would there was just so many so many little black flies that were
spawning or whatever you know up on the mountain at that time some of those little guys can bite
yeah they do beautiful yeah it's beautiful it is
wow nice have some kids with me
cameron gillis out of seattle is saying thank you for this excellent live stream uh uh scott christopher and molly and
the gsp team great views and fun experience to share come on
don't have to come out it's totally now totality ends in a few
minutes i'm calling my wife yeah
the moon looks like an ice cream it does
yeah we're yeah we're getting out of fatality now
isn't well i have to come out just a few
seconds it is so cool
oh it's gorgeous it's so dark and it's so it's eerie to see it
i think there's going to be i think two more eclipse coming up right much deeper but uh what i'm excited
about is uh annular next year in the total and two years oh yeah all right
are you coming obviously you're coming to the states for those of course of course oh i can see the
moon now okay i have my glasses now so um [Laughter]
you can see that the northern edge is really bright uh there's that it you know the moon
looks like a ring right now with a naked eye uh yeah there's
there's something that's uh probably reducing the brightness uh but uh with the camera it's like
it's just beautiful on the camera harold locke says thank you for thank
you uh you astro photographers are great first time ever seeing a lunar eclipse it's
awesome yeah it's it's so it's so eerie looking
i can see a little bit of the uh of the red shade yeah obviously from here we have a real
real nice clear clear night tonight which is good because we've been having some hazy nights lately so
yeah we should switch over um sure let's see
there we go um yeah there you are yeah so the slash exposure
just came in uh my my neighbor's motion light came on when i went outside oh i see
so it's a little extra bright um let me uh let me back up one exposure here uh
actually i'll go back up to you will the security light stay on or no it's uh it'll go off i don't remember
the uh the the how long that that normally takes um uh okay yeah i must have gone off here's
a here's a uh a 15 second exposure just came in there
we go that looks better wow i wish i had a cool cam this would have
been great with a cool cam yeah i thought about putting my my cw
294 on instead although these exposure times is still pretty short
where you don't really need the cool part of it so much still um
but uh yeah i said i didn't want to i didn't
want to interrupt my regular observing program either so being able to use my dslr was nice
so when you guys do the post-processing what what what are you you're going to take
uh what processes are you going to to use to get your final result do you think
so i'm not i'm not taking a video like i ordinarily would for uh for a planet or
the moon just because if i were to do that for every single frame be too much video for me to process for every like
part of the eclipse um wait and my dslr wouldn't be the ideal platform for that
but um you know i'll probably make some single frames of parts of the eclipse
and uh just um you know tweak tweak the curves and the levels so that the
um they don't look too washed out like this current one looks um make them look nice
uh make sure the color looks good and whatnot um and i'll probably do a several composite
images i made a really cool one for the last lunar eclipse of um the phases sort of in a clock
pattern and then like the uh totality in the center and i might remake that image and also
do some uh do some other ones that kind of show how the shadow moves across it and i don't know oh
i'll see what so many people have done and try and be creative as well
what time does the eclipse in the totality then um for me uh
totality ends at 4 25 so right about now actually
i'm gonna go poke my head outside again yeah it's starting to get light outside here
there you go
somali where are you now what part of the bay area
yeah no chance here
you know oh you got a great view it's awesome
yeah the totality is over
it's over that was fast i'm not used to this usually it takes an
hour or two right
so what time what's your local time there chris it's one hour plus your your time
i say and uh we were
about a half by seven right 6 30 here yeah
6 28 actually so
i got at least one of my neighbors to go outside she just texted me yay
it's not always easy to get the neighbors out you know i don't know why
yeah it's getting brighter right oh i'm getting clouded out now but i'm happy yeah you got it
though yeah it's clear as a bell here this is really one of the clearer nights we've had in a
while so it's just crazy it's crazier it's about 90 cloudy except
an area around the moon so nice i'm just lucky right now
yeah i've got a nice view of uh saturn right now too actually yeah let's
switch over here all right um hold on just a sec
actually you know it might be easier for me just to share my screen instead of starting up another thing here we go
there you go
um yes so uh it's it's it's neat uh i've been seeing people's
pictures of saturn coming up recently if they've been imaging it in the morning and it's uh what was it two
your your last year a year before something like that um saturn was at its greatest orbital
inclination i think it's called um where years ago yeah what would you say three years ago
three years ago yeah and and now it's uh so so it's it's brings it it was uh uh kind of
tilted more away from us and now it's starting to flatten out from our perspective as
you know the planet's kind of they're not exactly on the same plane they're pretty close to being on the same plane
um so you can see a a marked difference in the position of the rings
just from last year and especially from three years ago so i'm going to be putting together some comparison images now that i've been
doing astrophotography long enough to be able to see changes in in saturn's uh orbit so um
that'll be really cool unfortunately i'm clouded out now
oh no yeah um anyway i'm okay i'm fine i'm fine yeah yeah
you got it it was fantastic thank you yeah thank you here's here's the last view um
yeah it's it's it's going in and out of the clouds now oh i'm gonna stop sharing my screen
okay i'm just gonna give a parking shot before this time yeah go ahead
oh yeah wow that's a nice shot
you know i think it's actually kind of cool with some of the clouds in there you should you should take some video
at this uh with the clouds at this stage here that would that would make a
really cool video right the problem is it's going to be
difficult to process these policies because i need to stack
them oh yeah you're stacking you start stacking clouds all over the
oh yeah yeah i mean i would just be a problem i would just take a video for the sake of video and not not bother trying to
to stack it um but you know post just the video you can see plato over here oh yeah
nice look at all the stars you got there or hot pixels here get all those hot
picks it's what's the temperature out there
chris it's like in the 30s there yeah and that's not fahrenheit that's
celsius folks oh yeah so that's pretty that's really hot it's 30 degrees now
it's cool because it's like oh man it's gone now sorry i've been to
the philippines and yeah it's just like a wall of heat and
humidity that's it that's it that's great
but uh we got some uh uh um let's do a replay
let's check this one are you showing your screen again oh i'm sorry did you want to share your
screen again no it's okay it's okay uh because it's not gonna show anything because
it's uh i caught in raw mode so all right okay let's try to do some
processing
[Music] um think you made the audience very happy
tonight so both of you yeah all of you that participated tonight
uh tim hunter reports that uh he's in two sizes visible through thick clouds
for a while had a halo around the eclipse moon
oh that's kind of cool yeah
caesar got clouded out it was impossible for him
maxie got clouded um taking my saturn videos here right
i like i like to see some little seeing wiggle you know that way you know it's really real yeah
you know so yeah yeah if if i had uh um i'd used
my astro camera i could have kind of gone back and forth between capturing and live view
but would have been logistically a little challenging um so you having the dslr yeah it's not
live live but the pictures are coming in every every little bit here so oh that's a
nice shot right there yeah that's really beautiful
and i did i did angle my camera along um right ascension so it is uh
uh there's tyco there so it's mostly mostly upright which will make for some easier processing
earlier well upright for northern hemisphere i guess i should say
i love it yes that's real nice let's see how
saturn's doing over here oh my green frames have completed let me switch filters
to blue oh my cat has arrived
he was kind of staring at me quizzically when i was going in and out
to go look at the moon oh he's coming onto my lap he wants he wants some cuddles
let's see i need to adjust the exposure time on this guy a little bit
[Music]
all right now back over to the moon my partial face pictures have started i'm going to
modify that a bit
to take some more longer exposure ones let's see what's going to be the easiest
way to do that
um wow that little crescent is all we can
see right now yeah i took a um uh
it was started into my partial phase exposures right on time but you want
some of the longer ones in there as well look at that there you go
that's cool that's just cool i love it actually i'm going to
alternate between that and the shorter one
let's see [Music]
yeah let's do that i'm gonna drop this down to just a
couple seconds
there we go
yeah that's real nice
are your cats turning it on no they're they're both inside here i see now uh um
orion is uh it's on my lap here
what's the other cat's name apollo apollo and orion huh yeah you're gonna
have a space thing yeah um
yeah i i went to yosemite national park last week so orion is still being extra
cuddly from me being gone for a week right i had my neighbors over to to come play
with them and stuff like that but he loves me the most don't you isn't that right there's a
mount emilia earhart uh in yosemite and i remember spending the
night just sleeping on the ground at the top of that mountain and i think i believe that
mountains it's been a long time but i believe it's like 12 thousand feet or something like that or eleven thousand feet
and the sky and the milky way was so amazing i mean it's just i mean to the
this day it's just etched in my mind on how unbelievably stunning it was you know
no light pollution at all you know yeah i i unfortunately um uh
we camped outside the park and i was tired enough from the hiking that i didn't stay
i didn't really get to do any observing at all i brought some equipment with me to do
some photography but um didn't didn't get to do any oh well
yeah once you get to soak in some of the feeling of being out in nature in yosemite that's
it's uh it's very healing you know so yeah it was it was gorgeous and i got to
do some some great hikes and um it was a nice time i
went with my parents we uh awesome we camped together and that was really nice that's
special all right i'm gonna alternate between three different exposure times here
okay so a short exposure to kind of see how the
light's coming back a two second exposure and then i'm
um should be a five second one in here
somewhere
hey i just processed the first image oh all right let's start sharing and wait a second
let me just go ahead and share i need to process this i need to do some magic here
let's see what we got i see that cameron gillis is on as well
i'm not sure if he's got if he's capturing images or not
yes all right what you got
[Music]
um yeah so scott uh no i've been i've been
camping out here um i was really hoping i could there was some there were some breaks in the clouds
last night i saw the full moon as it was rising here in seattle but uh so i was kind of
hopeful there but then uh similar to a lot of folks uh so i had it
i was just about to go and then you can see this teasing me i could see the clouds darkening
uh but i've been checking out every five minutes here and uh yeah there's no there's no uh there's no
little people to fit in so uh just uh struck out this time but it's been wonderful to watch
you know christopher and molly's uh awesome this is the craziest image i've ever
done there you go guys all right
awesome did you um did you take a video or is this a single frame this
is how you do a video okay
congratulations chris that's awesome you can see copernicus
[Music] you're getting thank yous all around
here from people watching the show in chat
there's link over here look at that detail still it's amazing
it looks like something in stained glass or something you know oh yeah yeah like etched yeah
this is how it should look
wow maybe i can get a stained glass version of this
really cool yeah knock out a wall somewhere and hang it up
okay now i found a camera that will make this work so i plan to use this for the total
solar eclipse so yeah this is going to be very nice
now which camera is this chris this is the qhy 485 485 okay
nice this this this is supposed to be sold as a planetary cam but honestly um
it's too big for a planet cam this is an excellent for eclipses uh probably even solar eclipses this
will be you know the camera with a smaller factor even it's going to be an excellent camera you
can see the sensitivity and uh you cannot do this with a dslr you can see the details here yeah
yeah this is 200 zoom yeah
you can see all the craters yeah the mares and everything you have plato
uh psycho it's a gorgeous
color look i love that view right there it's
just oh like a deep red deep breath going to like burnt
you know that's awesome rusty yeah it's awesome i i see at the top
you know you can you can understand why your kids thought it was like ice cream
you that's an amazing i mean the dynamic
range right from the brightness it's uh to get that level of detail across
you know it's really well done christopher beautiful so it's an ice cream maker that could
make this yeah i would definitely buy some ice cream again what flavor would it be it would have to
be like um you know the it's kind of like the orange coverage
vanilla you know
kind of feeling like you're throwing some chocolate in there i'd be good for that too so kind of feeling cheery but also like
toasted marshmallow that might be good taste you know
especially black cherry with toasted marshall marshmallow oh yeah oh i'm so happy
this is how excellent excellent uh before sharpening and uh after yeah you know so i think
somebody asked about the linux complexion so i'm gonna show you how i process this okay so it's gonna start
i want to make sure it doesn't clean because i'm still outside right now um
[Music] the first i think i do is i apply the
speckle uh the speckle is like uh sharpening is like a hammer the speckle is like a rug so that when
you hit it with a hammer uh it sharpens without adding too much noise
then i would uh hit it with a the neck collection uh output sharpener
i have a preset here
output sharpener okay [Music]
this is a
very nice so uh that's that's that's how i do my processing
you got it christopher this is uh you got the image wonderful wonderful
is that a star streak down below i see probably cosmic ray
it's what a cosmic ray uh i think i stack about uh 60 shots less than 60 shots about
30 shots
but this is something you can't do with australia mm-hmm oh i'm happy
this is probably the nicest uh yeah totality i've ever done
what are the optics yeah it's awesome
oh yeah that's right you were using a seven millimeter nice cause it's an incredible
detail for a 70 millimeter absolutely wow
i mean it's yeah
i can see two stars overseas alpha and beta centauri
and to the right is the southern cross so although we are in the northern
hemisphere we can still see some of the jewels in the south
that's awesome what's your latitude uh plus 10 north yeah yeah
yeah that's great that's perfect so are there any questions uh are we getting any questions people just
like they're they're they're trying to figure out how to put their jaws back up you know and you know
people are just blown away by how beautiful it is and um how inspiring it is
and thanking uh you know uh the astrophotographers for sharing you
know all of this stuff so it's really cool you know i'm really glad that you were able to participate chris um
and molly your your images uh uh also the a little different aspect
which looked totally cool and you know it was nice to see uh jupiter and saturn
tonight as well and or this morning and uh so i think that both of you will have
stunning uh really uh amazing uh final results uh uh tonight and i'll be looking for
them uh on facebook i guess so a little later in the morning yeah a
little later you're not just gonna burn through the rest of the day image processing these i
guess you need to go to bed now yeah yeah yeah
i'm pretty awake now but i know i'll crash later so i'm going to preemptively sleep while it's still dark after this
here i stayed up through the night you know so i was like now for almost 24 hours
dang hey scott thanks for hosting this um you know guys fabulous i
loved it thank you thank you i have a lot of friends also who wanted to join in and this was
the only way i could you know have them join and uh yeah i'm happy that they hosted
it and uh yeah we got we got amazing images yes you did yes you did wonderful
well uh you know anytime that they that uh you and your friends want to um you know
create a global star party more in your time zones uh that you know more time zone appropriate for you i'm
happy to host it so okay wonderful here's the last view of the moon
oh it cleared up you said all right oh look at it oh wow nice
i think it's overexposure
so dramatic yeah it's partial face now but you can still see the
yeah yeah moon's uh moon's coming back there
[Music] how's it look uh from your side molly
looking pretty nice um let's see beautiful chris
rotating through exposures here and yeah i i poked my head outside yeah
this is just this is some of the clearest skies we've had in a little while so um
really lucked out here oh that's cool you can see the really the boots back but i'm not going
to images anymore it's super boring i'm i'm i'm just so happy with what i
got this was just this is the most fantastic
totality i've ever done and you guys saw it first yeah yeah awesome
this thing is live so thanks for making this part out thank you this is so nice
let's all end up on the cover of something i'm sure
anyway guys i think i need to back up because uh yeah although the moon area is clear i
think i have some practically clouds coming in so uh hey scott thank you thank you
thank you chris take care guys bye take care bye-bye
so that was uh christopher goff in the philippines um you know world famous for his planetary
uh photography and to hear him say that this is the best uh lunar uh eclipse shot he's ever made is
really quite something so molly let's uh
let's see what how how it's going out there okay
um yes i'm rotating through three different exposure times still to kind of capture
all of the coolness so um the uh longer two-second
exposure here you can still see some of the red and the light working its way across
and then let's see come on it was like
it was like a roughly like a five minute difference is that right between total view and totality for chris
that's what it sounded like yeah and that's probably due to our difference in latitude i say
um or something like that i have to think about that one a bit at a time it's not four in the morning
right right wow
well wonderful i'm gonna stop the five second one and just do the two and
the short come on abort
and then over on my other machine i'll show i've got a jupiter okay
let's see here yep there we go ooh scene got real
nice oh yeah look at it it's i think really steady have to take
another another set of videos here let me switch back to my rgb filters
bump up that exposure time a little too much
all right start capture
well now when you're imaging jupiter it does rotate quite quickly um it has a um it's it's
day only lasts 10 hours so you have to you have to be pretty
quick on the trigger on cap if you're going to do monochrome imaging like i'm doing red green and blue
otherwise you'll get some rotation between those three filters you really have
about a minute and a half to like total to to not really see that
rotation so i gotta i gotta be quick
so i'm taking and uh part of the part of the way i can be quick is um uh well i i'm only using usb 2.0
um if i use usb 3 on another computer it would be even faster but i've dropped my my capture area
down to only 640 by 480 pixels this really bumps up the frame rate you can see here it's uh
53 frames a second um for recording i'm using a solid state hard drive which
really helps that capture rate nice and high
and what did you do with all your data do you like take hard drives and just store them
away label them or that's a good question um
so i have a desktop computer that's my kind of my main rig the one one that i
built myself yeah and i have about uh i think it's eight hard drives in
there total oh wow okay one is one is an eight terabyte hard drive that
is for my my deep sky object data um i have a a four tier now i have another eight
terabyte for my planetary data i have a four terabyte for
time lapse and eclipses and miscellaneous stuff
then i have other hard drives for like my program files and i have a solid
state for the operating system and i have another solid state for video games and stuff like that
um so it's it's quite a system here now i so i have about eight terabytes
total of astro data wow across these these couple of disks
and uh so i've been working on a couple of backup solutions for a long time i've been backing up
onto external hard drives that i keep in like a fireproof waterproof
safe okay um you know in case the house burns down or at least my astro data will be safe and
right you know equipment stuff is replaceable uh the images that you've taken are not so i try and keep those safe but
uh recently i signed up for backblaze which is an online backup service that has
unlimited backup and unlimited um
like if you need to get that data back and it's six dollars a month and uh it's not the fastest backup but
um for for doing kind of archival backup like i'm doing it works really nicely as
kind of a catastrophic backup and um because comcast has data
caps i can only upload 1.2 terabytes a month but really only 800 gigabytes because i need
you know some for being on the internet doing other things um it's taken it's taken i've been
uploading for about six months and i still haven't got it all uploaded yet so wow what is it called
again you said back blaze yeah
yes i do that and then i i recently i finally got a a network attached storage drive oh
this one's not actually network attached it plugs directly into into one of your computers or i have a
router that has a usb port on it that i could make it network attached but i got a drobo
unit um it's a little it's like a like a network attached storage nas drive and
it's got a five hard drive phase and it's in it's not in a typical
raid configuration like how one might make multiple hard drives act like a
single hard drive but with redundancy um redundancy is important because if one of the hard drives
dies then i can swap in a new one and i haven't lost any data
and it does a little bit of a of a different it's not just like you know raid grade five or age six anything like
that um it does some kind of i don't know exactly remember exactly what it does some kind of hybrid between some
different raid systems you can have single disk redundancy or multi disk or two disk redundancy um hard drives
are really expensive right now because of uh supply issues and port stoppages and goodness knows what else
cryptocurrency mining whatever so um i i
and actually this unit was backordered for me for a couple of months from b h photo and i finally got it and it came
with i got two eight terabyte hard drives with it i wanted to get a third but they're astronomically expensive right now so
i'm just gonna have to wait yeah everything's getting astronomically expensive right now
yeah yeah so i i yanked a four terabyte drive out of my desktop that i wasn't
currently using after i did some rearrangement of my files so um i with with uh
20 terabytes of physical space i have about 10.8 terabytes
of actual usable space because of this of the single disc redundancy that it
does so uh that's enough to back up all my astro data which is about eight terabytes so it's
been backing up for the last couple of days and uh we'll hopefully be done here soon
right yeah see it's it's it's imperative to have backups of your of your astra data i mean it's
it's so hard to never get it back and hard drives crash power surges
uh corrupted discs you name it so having having some kind of backup solution ideally
one or two or three backup solutions for that data is worth worth the investment
particularly given the investment that we put in our imaging gear
yeah you can see the moon's really coming back now oh yeah
yeah bouncing back and forth during these two exposure times is kind of a nice way to see it because you can still see kind of
the dim portion and then where the moon is coming back into the
sunlight right now do you think that you'll do like some sort of maybe a montage or
something like that that uh um you know where you're showing the different phases as you go into
totality and coming back out yeah i'll probably
i've seen some really really cool images where they're kind of overlaid um like like the one that you were
showing earlier uh to kind of see the different phases i'll probably try something like that
um my screensaver came on
let me pull up that that clock image that i did while my uh computer screen saver goes back off
there we go um let's see i'm over on my other screen here let me go find
it so probably i'll probably do another one
like this because it was really cool there we go um i have an updated version of this
where i fixed uh this kind of bright square thing oh look at that that's cool
yeah and actually uh in the version of this where i fixed the the bright square thing here i i got
that printed at the canon booth at aic as well i say and it came out really
nice and yeah i love it i was quite pleased with yeah this idea
that's great molly that's a nice one thank you um yeah probably do some some cool like
composites and stuff like that showing how the shadow moves across and the different phases
and and everything else here's some here's a shot from from 2017
or 2019 lunar eclipse uh i used my dslr for this one so i didn't
have any i didn't do any videos like what crisco did to really pull out
a lot of the detail in the moon because i was using my dslr yeah um
but i um it yeah and i used the dslr again
this time i told myself this time i was going to use my my zwo camera so i could take some
videos but i wanted to image like normal because it was clear so
um yeah but dslr makes makes some of some of the capture
and processing easier looks like i'm maybe starting to get part of my neighbor's roof in there now
right i guess i won't have it too much longer during
oh yeah it's real close now yeah i was hoping to to get pretty far
through the partial phase here so i can make a complete image but um i'll just have to work with what
i got what you got was pretty darn good so yeah
yeah i'm quite pleased yeah this is wonderful oh yeah it's almost
there yeah i'll keep imaging until it goes behind the roof and then
probably uh bring the rig back inside and go to bed right
um wonderful let's see so what's your next adventure molly the next adventure
um let's see i'm gonna put that screens over here um
well i need to uh i need to see what star parties might be opening up for the summer time
um yeah nebraska star party i guess is going to happen um uh i think that's been confirmed
um okie tex i guess is going down oh yeah i did see
that i will be in class that week unfortunately yeah so i won't be able to go to okee
test um but yeah maybe some smaller
smaller events or something like that less you know more informal type of things but yeah i
might just have to go to like a like a three-day weekend four-day weekend star party yeah a
shorter drive so that uh i'll be taking classes over
the summer as well so um i'm not gonna have a whole lot of time this year but i'll be done with classes
this time next year so um i guess it might be a little bit of a pause and star parties for me
for 2021 but in uh um summer and onward of 2022
i'll be able to start hitting up more strawberries i'll be more in the research phase of my work
and have a little more of a flexible schedule
excellent excellent well that's pretty much pretty much it
yeah getting behind the roof there i'm going to zoom out yeah yeah
there's my neighborhood actually the the crescent of the moon right there is pretty much matching the slope of the
roof so it is so amazing how you arranged that that was a complete happenstance and
it looks tilted like this because i've got it lined up in in right ascension more or less so that the moon
just kind of stayed and upright the whole time as it were yeah yeah so yeah that is wild
yeah looks like a light dome on top of the house yeah i'll have to i'll have to send them
a picture yeah this is so cool
yeah well it's almost a wrap here um
it was wonderful we had a great audience people watching from around the world and uh you know
you know all of all of the astrophotographers who were able to get uh some clear weather uh did a great job
and um you know it's uh probably the most fun i've had uh on a
total lunar eclipse where i wasn't actually at a telescope so um i loved it it's wonderful
and what can i say um great success so um
cameron i guess you're still on at this point or is he yes yes
oh look at that just a fantastic uh you know this is this is this is awesome that we can you know
when many of us have uh cloudy skies but you know when you have a a good a good
group like we like you set up here scott it's so nice to be able to have that opportunity to
share and and and really you know give everyone a chance to take a look at
like the best images around the world and uh you know between volleyball and by some of the best after
photographers absolutely it's just it's just great so thank you for for making this
happen and i think everyone really enjoyed it good stuff it was great yeah i'm really
grateful that uh people were able to come together with us um grateful for david levy who
uh stayed up all night long so that he could deliver his second uh you know
poetry reciting and you know grateful that i could stay up
for the duration yeah that my computer's in there i've got good computers but
it was a struggle of downloading a whole new operating systems you know
getting it all back and reconfigured and and uh back online so but we were able
to pull it off so anyways i am uh i i need to get some uh
sleep myself um i want to thank thank you again molly for coming on
you've been on so many of our programs and uh it's it's uh i'm very grateful to you so
thank you so much yeah cameron likewise uh your your
uh enthusiasm for what we do here on our programming global star party and
now your own program is awesome uh molly um is going to have astronomy's universe
series you know so i think that's that's great um and she kicked one off uh
last night you know which was beautiful on the rosette nebula
so we had we had good talks great talks and uh um you know it's uh it's just so
inspiring and uh uh memorable so thank you very much
and uh to all the audience who chimed in and so many nice comments and so much inspiration from you too so
um we will see you a little bit later on this afternoon um
got uh um i think it's wednesday so we got first light chronicles tonight
and uh cameron uh uh uh would be on tonight as well with uh
cam cam astronomy so um right and uh so i will uh
i will uh get some rest and um something to eat and uh and then be back
at it so you guys take care and uh keep looking up
awesome thank you thank you so much
welcome
[Music]
[Music]
[Music] wow

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