Eclipses: Crash Course Astronomy #5

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  • Опубліковано 18 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @kyphilburg
    @kyphilburg 10 років тому +491

    Growing up in Zimbabwe I was fortunate enough to see 2 full solar eclipses in the early 2000s. It was a truly awe inspiring thing to behold. Some cows in a nearby field began panic and rushed to the river to drink as the is what they do toward the end off the day. They were obviously confused by the rapidly darkening sky.
    Does anyone know a good place too find info on future solar eclipses?

    • @Zerepzerreitug
      @Zerepzerreitug 10 років тому +16

      this page by NASA has a list of eclipses for the next decades and centuries. Click on the red link date and it will show a map showing where the eclipse will be.
      eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/solar.html

    • @hyrdrogenalpha
      @hyrdrogenalpha 10 років тому +6

      Arturo Gutierrez This page is by Fred Espenak which NASA has nothing to do with except to turn it on and off. Espenak retired in 2009 from NASA. Espenak updated the website, to a point, because NASA threatened to take it down back in February 2014 (which they did for ten days). Eclipse information is still outdated from 2020 and onward. If you see any orthographic map dated Fri, July 2 -- it is outdated.

    • @Zerepzerreitug
      @Zerepzerreitug 10 років тому +5

      hydrogenalpha damn...

    • @hyrdrogenalpha
      @hyrdrogenalpha 10 років тому +6

      Arturo Gutierrez He did start his own website after the NASA threat last year www.eclipsewise.com/eclipse.html ,but again the info is dated starting at 2020.

    • @savvapouroullis7927
      @savvapouroullis7927 6 років тому +5

      I watched the recent blood moon in SA this year! It was incredible.

  • @curtishammer748
    @curtishammer748 5 років тому +539

    2:17
    PP: "... and we call it the umbra, which is Latin for, you guessed it..."
    Me: "UMBRELLA!"
    PP: "shadow."
    Me: "... *coughs nervously"

  • @InterKELLar
    @InterKELLar 6 років тому +54

    My family drove 10 hours to witness the Great American Eclipse in totality. During the long arduous road trip my kids were complaining about why I made a big deal about needing to see it in totality. But when that moment arrived they were in absolute awe of the event. They eagerly asked me when will we do this again. I felt quite accomplished as a parent that day.

  • @linneamooney3090
    @linneamooney3090 8 років тому +480

    this guy seems like a fun dad

  • @cortster12
    @cortster12 10 років тому +456

    5:45 I can totally see Rhett and Link doing this.

  • @flameoso
    @flameoso 7 років тому +23

    Oh man, it's been a long time since I watched CC Astronomy. And while probably everyone knows what an eclipse is, Phil still manages to make this video really interesting because of the LOADS of new info that a normal person might not be curious enough to really research about. It also really helps that Phil manages to keep a clean, easy pace to listen to. So really, thanks! I've learned a lot.

  • @RicardoMoralesMassin
    @RicardoMoralesMassin 10 років тому +562

    And THAT´S when you attack the Fire Nation

    • @funman3768
      @funman3768 10 років тому +1

      Lol

    • @VolcyThoughts
      @VolcyThoughts 9 років тому +7

      You are awesome sir.

    • @thatsdisco
      @thatsdisco 9 років тому +8

      Bless you, Nerd. Bless you.

    • @grtiarde9768
      @grtiarde9768 9 років тому +3

      Ricardo Morales May an actually good movie come out to do the show justice.

    • @erickalena
      @erickalena 6 років тому +4

      Make sure you go to the bathroom before you do it, tho.

  • @abbeywhite2104
    @abbeywhite2104 9 років тому +47

    Rhett and Link! I love this now
    And I can sooooo imagine them doing an entire episode on eclipses.

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  10 років тому +387

    Sorry this one's a little late! We had to get some graphics just right.

    • @nicholascrass2555
      @nicholascrass2555 10 років тому +2

      Also the point of greatest totality will be in Giant City State Park in Illinois.

    • @davidtimothy7319
      @davidtimothy7319 10 років тому +3

      If the moon detaches itself from the earth 4cm a year, then wouldn't gravity between them loosen, accelerating the moon?, and by how much is the acceleration if so, and at what point would the moon kind of, fly off on it's own?

    • @BlokenArrow
      @BlokenArrow 10 років тому +9

      Dr Timothy The gravitational pull on the moon would lessen as a factor of the square of the distance, but it would still be attractive, which is slowing the rate in which the moon pulls away from the Earth (or vis versa). As the moon is already tide-locked, it is unlikely to be able to pull away from the earth permanently. In a billion years of so, the moon will have pulled away to its maximum distance, and the earth's rotation would have slowed to the point where the moon and earth will be tide-locked to each other and will be caught in a perpetual staring contest over what is left of New Jersey (after the revolution has destroyed it).

    • @davidtimothy7319
      @davidtimothy7319 10 років тому

      BlokenArrow Ah, thanks

    • @enbyadera
      @enbyadera 10 років тому +1

      definitely worth any delay.

  • @fakjbf
    @fakjbf 10 років тому +42

    "When you look upon the red eclipsed moon you're seeing the light from all the sunrises and sunset in the world hitting the moon and reflecting back to us"
    poetry

  • @JoePatterson
    @JoePatterson 10 років тому +72

    My parents kept me out of school to watch the May 30 1984 annular eclipse in a huge shadow box they'd built. Hands down the best truancy ever. The thing I remember most is the discovery that when you're in the blotchy light in the forest or under a leafy tree, what you're actually seeing is the result of dozens of pinhole cameras made by gaps in the canopy, all casting images of the sun on the ground, and you'd never know that except for those rare times when the sun is something other than a disc, and the ground is covered in little crescents.
    And Phil: You are invited to come to my house on August 21, 2017 for an eclipse party.

    • @hyrdrogenalpha
      @hyrdrogenalpha 10 років тому +7

      I watched the May 30th eclipse in Greeneville South Carolina in a cemetery. A cold windy day with telescopes setup among the graves. First time I ever saw shadowbands!

  • @TheFireflyGrave
    @TheFireflyGrave 9 років тому +18

    Wow, great episode. The parallel drawn between the 'blood moon' and sunsets really helped me understand this stuff better.

  • @Zerepzerreitug
    @Zerepzerreitug 10 років тому +69

    I like the idea I read once that if we ever encounter aliens and have to show any kind of "sign" or distinctive that will separate our little planet from all other civilizations, we should use an image of our solar eclipses. The odd coincidence between the moon's size and the sun's size, relative to the expected rarity of civilizations, makes it likely that we're the _only_ planet with a civilization in this galaxy where this happened.

    • @arturocevallossoto5203
      @arturocevallossoto5203 10 років тому +10

      What if they live in a moon orbiting a gas planet?

    • @Zerepzerreitug
      @Zerepzerreitug 10 років тому +11

      Arturo Cevallos Soto I'm pretty sure they would have some weird-ass astronomical coincidence in there too to brag about.

    • @chrisnotaperson8127
      @chrisnotaperson8127 10 років тому +1

      Have you read Transition by Iain M Banks?

    • @Zerepzerreitug
      @Zerepzerreitug 10 років тому

      Chris notaperson It pains me to say I've yet to submerge myself into the _Culture_ series. Does it mentions something like this in there? ;)

    • @chrisnotaperson8127
      @chrisnotaperson8127 10 років тому +1

      transition isn't one of his Culture books, though they are all amazing. But yes in transition there is a character that is obsessed with the idea of "instead of looking up during an eclipse, look around"

  • @zapp1984
    @zapp1984 10 років тому +48

    That was definitely Rhett and Link! Probably doing their new episode, "Will it Retinal Damage?!?!"

  • @andrewsmith8815
    @andrewsmith8815 9 років тому +262

    5:44 lol is that Rhett and link

    • @Cerzus
      @Cerzus 9 років тому +2

      +Andrew Smith Definitely!

    • @alliebova9000
      @alliebova9000 9 років тому +1

      exactly my thoughts

    • @devint998
      @devint998 9 років тому +3

      I saw this in school, and im like ohhh tnats rhett and link

    • @BehindThePortal3626
      @BehindThePortal3626 9 років тому +1

      +Andrew Smith but why are they?

    • @Anthonyxnaze
      @Anthonyxnaze 9 років тому +17

      *_Rhettinas_*

  • @RupaniJuvell
    @RupaniJuvell 9 років тому +2

    At age 15 I had three international astronomy Awards and at age 40, (now) it's easy to be envious of someone with so much incredible experience like working on the Hubble. I've enjoyed all of the Crash Course episodes-they are fun for me to watch with my fiance and get us talking about my favorite subject,science, but today I found that someone had cause to be jealous of me because I was at the total solar eclipse in Mazatlan, Mexico in the early 90's. It was the longest totality of my lifetime. A full two minutes! So thank you for the episodes, thank you for the information, and thank you for the boost to my self self-esteem!

  • @benaaronmusic
    @benaaronmusic 10 років тому +9

    YES! Thanks for the Eclipse information!
    I've been waiting for August 21st, 2017 for almost a decade!
    It's so close!
    (BTW, love the Rhett and Link animation at 05:41)

  • @TheAmazingDolph
    @TheAmazingDolph 9 місяців тому +40

    Whose here on April 8th

  • @AwkwardPasta004
    @AwkwardPasta004 10 років тому +35

    "But when it happens, you get magic... Or even better, you get science"
    Me: HELL YEA!

  • @tesseraph
    @tesseraph 10 років тому +23

    "When you look upon the red eclipsed moon, you're seeing the light from all the sunrises and sunsets in the world hitting the moon and reflecting back to us."
    Science: Bringing You Fact-Based Inspiration Since The Dawn of Time

  • @teramasz
    @teramasz 5 років тому +89

    Lesson recap: the Earth is spherical.

    • @frikinkiwi
      @frikinkiwi 4 роки тому +3

      I thought it was flat

    • @blackbarbie350
      @blackbarbie350 4 роки тому

      Lol

    • @divinelyautistic
      @divinelyautistic 4 роки тому +4

      Well considering that you get a CURVED shadow on the moon during a lunar or partial lunar eclipse, will show that whatever is casting the shadow is round. A shadow is a replica of the object itself. So if the shadow is round then the object is round, pretty simple.

    • @adrijachakraborty215
      @adrijachakraborty215 4 роки тому +2

      @@frikinkiwi LOL

  • @xyvaz
    @xyvaz 10 років тому +1

    I want to thank you for the rhythm of your speech in this episode, it was the first time I felt like I could breath. I think you put more pauses in and it's a much more enjoyable experience.

  • @Mcking-11
    @Mcking-11 Рік тому +6

    0:00- Introduction
    0:52- How do Solar Eclipses work?
    2:03- Umbra & Penumbra
    3:16- The Sun's Corona
    4:13- Solar Eclipse Totality
    5:08- Annular Eclipse
    5:32- Can you look at Solar Eclipse
    6:53- Lunar Eclipse
    8:24- Sun of the Earth and Moon
    9:27- Review

  • @georgeberidze2419
    @georgeberidze2419 10 років тому +386

    5:42 let's talk about that....

  • @jrtsparky1473
    @jrtsparky1473 4 роки тому +547

    Whos here watching for online classes cause of Corona

  • @hazelgallego9817
    @hazelgallego9817 4 роки тому +6

    “DUH!”
    “So go NUTS!”
    Bro these linessssss 😂 i want a professor like this

  • @theJellyjoker
    @theJellyjoker 10 років тому +572

    How dose an Astronaut cut his hair?
    Eclipse it!

  • @mcengiz9156
    @mcengiz9156 10 років тому +1

    I loved Crash course before you Phil, but please allow me to say that you totally brought a new life to Crash Course... You Rock!

  • @EandCheckmark
    @EandCheckmark 4 роки тому +414

    Anyone watching in 2020 and worried about him saying corona?

    • @warwickeng5491
      @warwickeng5491 4 роки тому +11

      I almost had one of those Vietnam style flashbacks ahhhhh
      Goddamn just take me back to 2015 for a bit please.

    • @usherflips
      @usherflips 4 роки тому +5

      Yes I had to play it back to make sure I knew what I think I heard

    • @amberwhitby7511
      @amberwhitby7511 4 роки тому +2

      Haha yep

    • @Only1LikeM3
      @Only1LikeM3 4 роки тому +1

      he said carona around 3:25

    • @marii1555
      @marii1555 4 роки тому

      me doe

  • @Asummersdaydreamer14
    @Asummersdaydreamer14 10 років тому

    Thanks for doing this series, Crash Course. I have never had the opportunity to really learn about astronomy, and so far I am really digging the episodes and the host. DFTBA!

  • @robert_wigh
    @robert_wigh 8 років тому +8

    As always, thank you very much, Phil, for making this astronomy lesson! Of course, big thank you to all the others at _Crash Course_ working with all the graphics and stuff for these astronomy videos.
    The moon and the sun are really interesting. Do solar and lunar eclipses happen on other planets too (at least, other planets in our solar system)?

    • @keyeraboyd6996
      @keyeraboyd6996 5 років тому

      I like to think that Saturn has them alot since the amount of moons it has

  • @TheClauah
    @TheClauah 8 років тому +1

    Phil Plait you are great, thank you! I saw a total sun eclipse when I was 15, it's really one of the most beautiful things I ever seen in my life, don't miss next one, travel if necessary! everybody should see it at least once, specially astronomers

  • @RainAngel111
    @RainAngel111 10 років тому +70

    does anyone ever think of how fucking crazy it is that the moon and the sun are almost the exact same size in the sky? What were the chances that we'd have a moon and sun the exact size that they are, at the exact distance that they are? The fact we can have eclipses at all is fucking amazing.

    • @arturocevallossoto5203
      @arturocevallossoto5203 10 років тому +19

      It really isn't if you think about it. If it wasn't that we would find awe in another things.
      "Omg, we have a planet with rings. What are the odds, right?!"

    • @Mostlyharmless1985
      @Mostlyharmless1985 10 років тому +17

      There's a gas cloud out there, that if you took a bucket of it to earth where you could smell it, it would smell like rum, and taste like raspberries.
      My point is, the universe is a big and strange place.

    • @RainAngel111
      @RainAngel111 10 років тому +7

      yeah. that'd be pretty amazing too.
      Planets, like people. have some amazing things that make them special and interesting.
      killjoy...

    • @RainAngel111
      @RainAngel111 10 років тому +1

      Mostlyharmless1985 but it might also burn your face off

    • @basslinedan2
      @basslinedan2 7 років тому +8

      Just chiming in 2 years late to say you're absolutely right, it is amazing that our moon and sun are at just the right relative size and distance for eclipses. And they won't be around forever, eventually the moon will drift too far away for totality. Sure there are some very odd things out there, and lots of planets have ring systems, but I bet very few have proper solar eclipses.

  • @jadeclare2288
    @jadeclare2288 9 років тому +1

    This series is great for aspiring astronomers and just general knowledge, I can't believe I didn't discover them sooner. It's simplified and explained and just awesome! Thanks for these, you got a subscriber :)

  • @tsgillespiejr
    @tsgillespiejr 10 років тому +7

    Just noticed the model of the Enterprise-E on the desk. Props.

  • @departed402
    @departed402 10 років тому

    I was in the penumbra last year, and it was magnificent. The cloud cover that day was such that you could look directly at the partially eclipsed sun through the thin layer of clouds.

  • @DLWormwood
    @DLWormwood 10 років тому +63

    Did I just catch a Rhett&Link reference in there?

    • @cristianachi233
      @cristianachi233 10 років тому +3

      i thought i was the only one!!! #mythicalbeasts

  • @jowil93
    @jowil93 10 років тому

    This series honestly couldn't have come at a better time. I've just started an Astronomy course at my university and my professor is absolutely hopeless, I needed something like this if I want to pass.

  • @santiagogalardi8276
    @santiagogalardi8276 9 років тому +5

    I love this channel and especially Astronomy!

  • @yougotnojams5167
    @yougotnojams5167 7 років тому +2

    You made learning exciting for me😭✨ Thank youuuu❤️❤️❤️

  • @minyaw1234
    @minyaw1234 10 років тому +40

    I've seen a total solar eclipse in 1999 in southern Germany. The clouds just cleared half a minute before the total eclipse, so I wasn't able to see how it got to it but I saw the main event with my own eyes. It was a great experience.

    • @gaiusbaltar4850
      @gaiusbaltar4850 10 років тому +5

      Same day, same time, different spot. My mom had bought special glasses, but I didn't have them with me, because I was playing in the street. As for you, the clouds cleared just in time for the event. I had no glasses, but I still wanted to see the eclipse, so I had to use my bare eyes. That was very stupid of me. My mom was so scared for my poor little eyes. Fortunately, I had no sequel, but I wouldn't do it again, that's for sure.
      That was Belgium 1999, one of the best years of my life, though I don't remember why that number inspires me such a good feeling.
      More than ten years later, what the Moon and the Sun together couldn't do to me, the monitor of my computer did. And I don't even intend to stop. How pathetic is that...

    • @fpoggesi
      @fpoggesi 10 років тому +2

      I must have been in a field just downwind of you because that day I had the pleasure of experiencing the perfect alignment of Sun, Moon, and clouds leading to me seeing less than nothing.

    • @gaiusbaltar4850
      @gaiusbaltar4850 10 років тому

      Frank Knoller That's quite an alignment. I'm glad it didn't led to the end of the world.

    • @Nariom
      @Nariom 10 років тому +2

      I saw it from east France that was so amazing ! I remember when the sunlight went off and the village down the hill suddenly lit from automatic public lighting ! The sky was perfectly clear and they've been handling special glasses to everyone all over the region so we could enjoy the show. I'm sorry for Phil Plait since he said he never had the chance to witness that.

    • @commando1124
      @commando1124 10 років тому

      Ha! We had clear skies in Flanders

  • @DARIEN792
    @DARIEN792 7 років тому

    i've seen a total solar eclipse once... I was like 7 and lived in my home country Guatemala... i was eating when i heard my mom talking about it and that its a rare event (it was on the news too), i stopped eating and went outside with my friends to watch it and there was people watching it too, they were warning us to be careful cause we could go blind... i'll never forget its an amazing moment i hope that one day i can become an astronomer and tell this story to younger generations.

  • @ultraviolette69
    @ultraviolette69 9 років тому +105

    5:42 Let's talk about that

    • @ChrisLuigiTails
      @ChrisLuigiTails 9 років тому +5

      +Tianna Violette (Ultraviolette) - I thought of Rhett & Link the second I saw them! XD

    • @jadonpetersson
      @jadonpetersson 6 років тому +4

      Tianna Violette Stolen comment

  • @blake4249
    @blake4249 2 роки тому +1

    "today we're going to talk about eclipses!"
    some dude with a big sword: *_aggressive screeching_*

  • @merveates3391
    @merveates3391 2 роки тому +4

    İs there anyone who is watching those videos other than me in 2022? I am a luckly person becuse of finding this channel. I am a electrical electronic engeneering student and when ı was watching this video, ı am thinking abaout physics master. Love you guyzzz. Thanks for this video :)

  • @MrARock001
    @MrARock001 10 років тому

    I am just so incredibly jazzed that Crash Course has rocketed into the stratosphere of so many topics! I am teary-eyed remembering the early days of Crash Course World History, when sound quality was sketchy and Thought Cafe was Thought Bubble. *sniff*

  • @tahseenkhan3629
    @tahseenkhan3629 9 років тому +22

    Am I the only who, despite my deep interest in seeing eclipses, got chills at those eclipse animations?

    • @TylerSane5
      @TylerSane5 5 років тому

      Ur life must be very exciting! Haha

    • @Nexandr
      @Nexandr 5 років тому

      me to lol

  • @pesti_ja1
    @pesti_ja1 9 років тому

    Thanks for these excellent videos.
    And thanks for the graphic at 1:39 . I've been trying to find a clear explanation of the relative planes of orbit of the Sun / Earth / Moon for years.

  • @heyyy_
    @heyyy_ 2 роки тому +3

    any subject is fun if the right teacher teaches it❤️

  • @michaelknauer7471
    @michaelknauer7471 5 років тому

    This is by far the most interesting show on youtube, I wish new episodes of crashcourse Astronomy would come out!!!

  • @retroberrymilk
    @retroberrymilk Рік тому +3

    I felt stupid for not getting why eclispe didn’t happen every two weeks cuz of moon phases but this explained it I finally get it now, I love this series I’m watching it over the summer❤️

  • @paulcottrell3991
    @paulcottrell3991 9 місяців тому +1

    I hope Phil was able to make it today!!!

  • @blackbarbie350
    @blackbarbie350 4 роки тому +5

    3:21 Me- The sun’s coronavirus

  • @PolarisStarman
    @PolarisStarman 10 років тому

    Excellent presentation, Phil. I didn't see a discussion of the frequency of eclipses (especially solar eclipses in one location) but that involves the Moon's variable orbit, so not so easily tackled without more detail.

  • @thatsrg
    @thatsrg 9 років тому +22

    5:42 Rhett and Link's face thou....

  • @MuslimAmericanGirlz
    @MuslimAmericanGirlz 10 років тому

    I am really enjoying this series. Astronomy is one of my favorite areas of science, and these episodes give me great insight into it. Thanks you so much and I can't wait for the next episode!! :)

  • @benmcguigan4324
    @benmcguigan4324 4 роки тому +7

    3:28 little did he know what would happen

  • @TeoAl
    @TeoAl 9 років тому

    I've seen 2 or 3 total solar eclipses and never thought it was a big deal. Damn, I wish you good luck! It really is something you want to see at least once in your lifetime.

  • @lil_stargaze4303
    @lil_stargaze4303 5 років тому +3

    I live in Wyoming, we had a Solar Eclipse 2 years ago I think it was? We didn't see the total eclipse but we notice that the shadow of leaves became cresented aw the moon across the sun, which I found very intriguing

  • @luisdiniz3211
    @luisdiniz3211 9 років тому +1

    Awesome video! It's really helping me in my astronomy class!

  • @Fhantom99
    @Fhantom99 9 років тому +4

    Saw a video on another channel about people who reject the Earth is round and, to this day, still believe it is flat... seriously! To them I say, "Revenge is a dish best served on a Plait." 8:48

  • @ianhubbard641
    @ianhubbard641 5 років тому

    Saw it August 2017. I'd agree with his friends, it was the most spectacular thing I've ever seen

  • @yusrarahman2635
    @yusrarahman2635 8 років тому +23

    5:48 Rhett and Link! LOL

    • @milyekrivit3173
      @milyekrivit3173 8 років тому

      Lol, thought the same thing...

    • @COUP_DE_COEUR
      @COUP_DE_COEUR 8 років тому

      Yusra Rahman yeah! lol

    • @COUP_DE_COEUR
      @COUP_DE_COEUR 8 років тому

      Yusra Rahman why them?

    • @coutinhojon
      @coutinhojon 7 років тому

      There's clearly a LINK between staring at an eclipse and damaging your RHETTINA. A year late, but totally worth it. I'll show myself out.

  • @juanjolozadap4945
    @juanjolozadap4945 5 років тому

    I'm watching the total solar eclipse today, and I've just happened to begin this series a couple of weeks ago. Lucky me. PD: I'm in the path of totality :-) I want to thank everybody involved in this amazing series. I'm soooo hooked with astronomy now.
    Juan - Buenos Aires, Argentina - 2nd July 2019

  • @jasonlewis4438
    @jasonlewis4438 7 років тому +7

    6:12
    "Because that FLASH can catch you by surprise"
    To be fair, I normally get caught by surprise when something good flashes me...

  • @dechenbloom9639
    @dechenbloom9639 6 років тому

    I've seen a total Solar Eclipse and it was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen!!!

  • @lliwylime
    @lliwylime 9 місяців тому +5

    who here is watching this for remote day for the solar eclipse 4/8/24

  • @bluerose600
    @bluerose600 10 років тому +1

    Hearings his rich, intelligent voice say "doobly-do" is just perfection.

  • @Thumbsupurbum
    @Thumbsupurbum 9 років тому +9

    Man I can't wait for August 2017, total solar eclipse will pass through close to my hometown.

    • @MD-mc9xw
      @MD-mc9xw 9 років тому

      +Flintstoned What town

    • @Thumbsupurbum
      @Thumbsupurbum 9 років тому +2

      MrWhiteLightness777 Reptilian General Pinehurst, NC. I plan on driving down to SC for the total view. Haven't decided on which town there yet though.

    • @alexwang982
      @alexwang982 7 років тому

      Flintstoned Charleston

  • @Tyrog
    @Tyrog 9 років тому +1

    " When you look upon the red eclipsed Moon, you're seeing the light from all the sunrises and sunsets in the world hitting the Moon and reflecting back to us. " ... My mind has been blown! This is amazing.

  • @georgeberidze2419
    @georgeberidze2419 10 років тому +7

    20 March 2015 - Total Solar Eclipse
    Regions seeing at least a partial eclipse: Europe, North/East Asia, North/West Africa, West in North America, Atlantic, Arctic.

    • @dattebenforcer
      @dattebenforcer 10 років тому

      Or, you could just grab a piece of cardboard, cut it in a disc shape, and hold it up against the sun.

    • @Twosocks42
      @Twosocks42 10 років тому +2

      For those in North America, the next real good one will be August 21st 2017. The full 100% eclipse will occur exactly where I live, so I don't even have to go anywhere. :)

    • @rhemorigher
      @rhemorigher 10 років тому +2

      Twosocks42 No fair, that's my birthday why do you get the eclipse?

    • @Twosocks42
      @Twosocks42 10 років тому +2

      rhemorigher Well, don't know whereabouts you hail, but you can use this schedule to see if you have any coming relatively near you. www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/list.html

  • @RoddyBear143
    @RoddyBear143 5 років тому

    I was in Carbondale Illinois for the 2017 eclipse. Never seen anything like it before. Pure amazed

  • @ChrisSeltzer
    @ChrisSeltzer 10 років тому +20

    Can we all agree the guy teaching Astronomy is amazing? I don't know what Phil's background is but he's such a good teacher. It makes up for the terrible teaching in Government and Politics.

    • @Mostlyharmless1985
      @Mostlyharmless1985 10 років тому +5

      He's written several books on Astronomy, blogs about matters astronomy on a site called Bad Astronomy, and for a time was the president of the JREF.

    • @roostewrum
      @roostewrum 10 років тому +1

      He was also an Astronomer for the Hubble Space Telescope before leaving to take up writing and education.

    • @alexjones4338
      @alexjones4338 6 років тому +2

      Rushing through the material without letting students time to take it all in is not good teaching practice. Take notes from the late Richard Feynman or George Levy. They knew/know how to teach and engage with students unlike Phil. Guaranteed you didn't get 50% of what Phil said without having to rewind back.

  • @TheTexas1994
    @TheTexas1994 7 років тому +2

    I hope you saw a total eclipse today Phil! I did in South Carolina and it was truly magnificent!

    • @thajiveone
      @thajiveone 7 років тому +1

      Me too! We drove 3 hrs from Ga to SCSU in Orangeburg. It was amazing!

  • @TheOverThinker92
    @TheOverThinker92 5 років тому +5

    it is really interesting how those ancient greeks knew for a fact that the earth is not flat but rather a circle or sphere based on their view of lunar eclipse. in 21st century we call ourselves "civilized" nation yet we have thousands of people that still believe the earth is flat, and we have so much technology and advancements in science.

  • @GrubbJunker
    @GrubbJunker 10 років тому

    I can't get enough of Phil =( I can't wait for mooooooooooore

  • @ChrisLuigiTails
    @ChrisLuigiTails 9 років тому +11

    Those 2 guys at 5:44 are Rhett & Link XD

  • @himanshushekhardas1730
    @himanshushekhardas1730 6 років тому

    best explanation sir...mind blowing !!!

  • @erikziak1249
    @erikziak1249 10 років тому +17

    August 21, 2017 is your chance, Phil, you do not have to travel to any distant place (assuming you are in the United States).

    • @Dantheman1695
      @Dantheman1695 10 років тому +3

      lol i looked that up right after I watched this video too! I'm really close to a total eclipse spot! Climbing aboard #Hypetrain

    • @alexwang982
      @alexwang982 7 років тому +1

      Or April 2024

    • @peaceserenity5115
      @peaceserenity5115 7 років тому

      Although I'm late its happening on Monday august 21 2017, they had a whole segment on it at school.

  • @alonsorojas3829
    @alonsorojas3829 10 років тому

    Another great episode Phil! Looking forward to the next one.

  • @CoalOres
    @CoalOres 8 років тому +12

    Thanks to my school, we weren't allowed to see the eclipse, now the next one is in 2072 for us, ffs.

    • @LastTimeLord12
      @LastTimeLord12 8 років тому +4

      You'll be alive bud! Take your grandkids

    • @someguy7869
      @someguy7869 8 років тому +1

      there will be a total solar eclipse in 2017, only in the usa though.

    • @ЕгорБартош-х7ъ
      @ЕгорБартош-х7ъ 8 років тому +6

      You can always become rich an travel around the world hunting for eclipses

    • @TheRealVivia
      @TheRealVivia 7 років тому

      I only got a partial today but it got cloudy right as it got there smh next one is in April 2024, it will be over NYC I am gonna get in that path of totality.!Not missing it

    • @BritishMetric144
      @BritishMetric144 7 років тому +3

      Why not try the eclipse of 2024? Or 2023? Or even 2045?

  • @rmariapm
    @rmariapm 8 років тому +1

    I always thought I should have studied Astronomy, and I didn't because back then, I was too scared to fail. I believe it's never too late, right? Thank you so, so much for sharing science, I love your videos.

  • @TheVlp3r
    @TheVlp3r 10 років тому +8

    5:48 ..Rhett and Link ?

  • @MidwestHippies
    @MidwestHippies 10 років тому

    Crash Course is AWESOME! Thank you guys so much for covering Astronomy, one of my favorite subjects and hobbies. Phil is a great host too.
    BTW; I've heard of people using a welding mask to watch solar eclipses, is that sufficient eye protection? I would imagine it would be...

  • @a.thiren2459
    @a.thiren2459 10 років тому +8

    Is that Rett and Link at 5:45?

    • @maddieb2412
      @maddieb2412 9 років тому

      Thiren Sriskantharajah i think it was

    • @carolprince16
      @carolprince16 9 років тому +1

      Thiren Sriskantharajah Yup!

    • @ChrisLuigiTails
      @ChrisLuigiTails 9 років тому +1

      +Thiren Sriskantharajah - Yeah but... why? XD

  • @starfield1874
    @starfield1874 6 років тому

    Cartoon cameos of Rhett and Link! Awesome! I'm a huge Good Mythical Morning fan. :)

  • @restfulnewt9595
    @restfulnewt9595 10 років тому +4

    Rhett and Link geting their RHETTinas burnt... 5:40

  • @jeremysartin745
    @jeremysartin745 6 років тому

    saw the last one in SC. we drove back roads for hours stopped in some small town bought hotdogs and watched in a parking lot. good times.

  • @MikkoHaavisto1
    @MikkoHaavisto1 10 років тому +47

    What is the eclipse called when the Sun comes between the Moon and the Earth?

    • @arturocevallossoto5203
      @arturocevallossoto5203 10 років тому +91

      Armageddon.

    • @LughSummerson
      @LughSummerson 10 років тому +12

      It's not an eclipse if the light source is in the middle.

    • @hyrdrogenalpha
      @hyrdrogenalpha 10 років тому +11

      Your dead!

    • @ithiusdomino
      @ithiusdomino 10 років тому +25

      Arturo Cevallos Soto this made me giggle pretty hard because it was a fantastic response. Having said that, Armageddon is a place, apocalypse is the end of existance.
      Hey, look at me ruin everyones fun.

    • @sweetbabycheeses8
      @sweetbabycheeses8 9 років тому +32

      It's called death

  • @BeanSprouts02
    @BeanSprouts02 7 років тому

    Thank you so much for clarifying that the total eclipse is still possible for even at least millions of years. Rough math, yeah, but I was suddenly filled with anxiety when I heard that "the moon slowly moves back for 4 centimers a year". I still wanted to see these phenomenal events during my lifetime with my mother and I would really hate it if she'd have to stop seeing many of them in the future. Idk.
    Thanks for the useful information btw! Hope you make a channel of your own. You're a great teacher 👍😁

  • @bigglessy
    @bigglessy 10 років тому +4

    Not to make you jealous, But I saw the Total solar eclipse in August 1999 from the UK ;)

    • @laurencook8722
      @laurencook8722 7 років тому

      bigglessy ya well I get to see one tomorrow

  • @luisdivieso
    @luisdivieso 10 років тому +1

    Thanks for the video

  • @abbylane6212
    @abbylane6212 9 років тому +13

    5:45 ***** !

  • @nidhisharma463
    @nidhisharma463 8 років тому +1

    this is super cool, i love this episode

  • @KajoFox
    @KajoFox 10 років тому +10

    Pro tip: Looking at the sun is 100% safe through a telescope.
    huehuehue

    • @BritishMetric144
      @BritishMetric144 7 років тому +1

      ONLY if it has a solar filter!

    • @MadrigalSingers-
      @MadrigalSingers- 6 років тому

      I trusted you

    • @chrisc1140
      @chrisc1140 6 років тому

      I actually burned a hole in my solar glasses looking through a telescope with them. We didn't have a cover for the telescope itself but I thought my own would be enough. Thankfully I jerked away when I saw a bright flash and so didn't do any damage, but those lenses died to protect my vision.
      F

  • @dillardgirls8644
    @dillardgirls8644 5 років тому

    Your helping so much to do this career thank you!!!

  • @jcrules101
    @jcrules101 10 років тому +5

    5:43. Is that Rhett and Link?

  • @wolfboy18
    @wolfboy18 6 років тому

    I saw this the last time it happened, I was in the Umbra. So worth it to see. I have seen a few Solar Eclipses, but never a Lunar one.

  • @jamesdahmer5027
    @jamesdahmer5027 8 років тому +9

    I LOOOOOOOOVE SCIENCE!!!! WAAAAAA!!!!!!!

  • @TG-Maverick22
    @TG-Maverick22 10 років тому

    This video was very educational! Much appreciated Crashcourse.10/10