• XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    8:17pm EST Dec 11, 2023

    the occultation will be visible only from a narrow path stretching from Asia to southern Europe, Florida and eastern Mexico.

    The article has links to maps, a detailed info page, and a livestream

    Edit: bad fleshbot. I’m kinda guessing the article changes time for the reader because it absolutely says 11th, not the 12th as the title says.

    • XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      Things like this make you realize eclipse as a bit of an arbitrary term to cover what we feel isn’t quite a transit and isn’t quite an occultation. Total solar eclipses are occultations and annulars are transits. Lunar eclipses are very disproportionately occultations but we’re sitting inside the cozy Earth looking out like office gophers commenting “it’s really coming down now” about snow flurries. When the Martian rover saw Phobos in front of the sun, it was a transit.

    • brianorca@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      They are not well positioned to do that. You have to be in a very narrow path. But a properly positioned ground telescope could learn quite a lot about the star by studying the light curve. In some ways, events like this can give more detail than even the Webb can do. We can also learn about the asteroid by studying the light curves from several telescopes in different positions.

      This is the type of event where high speed video gives better data than a long exposure. It will only be 12 seconds from beginning to end at any viewing site. And it will cross the earth in 18 minutes.