So, what have you learned from today's annular eclipse?
I have learned It's being a lie. photoshop experts in nasa created a cgi , france24 published it, so you copied from there.
No you haven't learned any such thing! That photo had nothing whatsoever to do with NASA! Here read this:
'Ring of fire' eclipse wows across Asia
. . . . . . . . . . .
The amateur astronomer used a special solar filter on his telescope as there is no safe period to observe an annular solar eclipse.
Alexander Alin 45, a geophysicist from Germany, travels around the world following eclipses.
"It's only two minutes, but it's so intense that you talk about it with your friends, family for the next month," Alin said.
- Eclipse stops play -
In southern India, people gathered on the beaches in Tamil Nadu to watch the event.
The eclipse even affected cricket, with play delayed by two hours in a first-class match between Mumbai and Rajkot.
The eastern state of Odisha declared a public holiday, with all government offices, courts, schools and colleges closed.
But in New Delhi, cloud and pollution blocked the view and Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted his disappointment, although only a partial eclipse would have been visible that far north.
"Like many Indians I was enthusiastic about solareclipse2019," Modi said.
"Unfortunately, I could not see the Sun due to cloud cover but I did catch glimpses of the eclipse in Kozhikode and other parts on live stream."
In Indonesia, hundreds of people gathered outside Jakarta Planetarium to watch the event using protective glasses supplied by the planetarium, hoping for clear skies at the time of maximum eclipse.
"I could see the eclipse this morning and now am very excited to see the peak though now it is cloudy," said Chandra Ayu Dewi, 39, who arrived at 7:00 am with her children.
The next annual eclipse in June 2020 will be visible to a narrow band from Africa to northern Asia.
The following one in June 2021 will only be seen in the Arctic and parts of Canada, Greenland and the remote Russian far east.
burs/mtp/kma
See, it has nothing to do with NASA but taken by "Alexander Alin 45, a geophysicist from Germany, travels around the world following eclipses"!
And the videos in my post had nothing to do with NASA! have a look here:
December 26th Annular Eclipse « Reply #15 on: December 27, 2019, 01:09:05 PM »But what is your problem with Solar eclipses?
They have been observed and even predicted decades in advanced by the ancient Babylonians and Chinese astronomers.
And those ancient Babylonians and Chinese astronomers also believed that the Earth was flat.
Why don't you learn a little about the history of these things?