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Eclipse science

เผยแพร่:   โดย: MGR Online

This photo provided by Bob Baer and Sarah Kovac, participants in the Citizen CATE Experiment, shows a diamond ring shape during the 2016 total solar eclipse in Indonesia. (R. Baer, S. Kovac/Citizen CATE Experiment via AP)
For the 2017 eclipse over the United States, the National Science Foundation-funded movie project nicknamed Citizen CATE will have more than 200 volunteers trained and given special small telescopes and tripods to observe the sun at 68 locations in the exact same way.

The thousands of images from the citizen-scientists will be combined for a movie of the usually hard-to-see sun’s edge.
In this Aug. 3, 2017 photo, amateur astronomer Mike Conley practices with the telescope he will use to document the Aug. 21 total solar eclipse, at his home in Salem, Ore. Conley is part of a project led by the National Solar Observatory to have dozens of citizen-scientists posted across the U.S. photograph the celestial event in an effort to create a live movie of its path that will help scientists learn more about the suns corona. (AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus)
This frame grab from a video shows Gene Brick, 92, left, and his son, Bartt Brick, peering through a telescope in Madras, Ore., June 12, 2017, that they made together in 1964. The two plan to watch the upcoming solar eclipse together Aug. 21, 2017, as it passes through Oregon. (AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus)
In this May 20, 2017 photo provided by Don Walter, Clemson University undergraduates Erin Thompson and Harrison Leiendecker practice using a Citizen CATE telescope during the South Carolina CATE training Workshop in Orangeburg, S.C. (Don Walter via AP)
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