No subject
Wed Apr 10 21:32:07 UTC 2024
started to drop a bit before it went completely dark, but that was nowhere near the change that
the full on total eclipse created.
One of *many* sites with information:
https://eclipsophile.com/2024tse/
Bob
> On Apr 10, 2024, at 11:12â¯AM, Jeremy Nichols via time-nuts <time-nuts at lists.febo.com> wrote:
>
> Does anyone know the size of the Moonâs shadow on the Earth? From satellite
> views, I get the feeling it could be the size of one or more US a states.
> That would knock out a lot of solar production and cause a lot of
> nightlights to illuminate.
>
> Jeremy
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 10, 2024 at 7:14â¯AM Chris Caudle via time-nuts <
> time-nuts at lists.febo.com> wrote:
>
>> On Monday, April 8, 2024 9:23:47 PM CDT Scott Newell via time-nuts wrote:
>>> Was anyone logging the eastern US power grid today during the
>>> eclipse? I've got some pretty simple hardware at home and about 50
>>> miles away at work. Both are showing a bit of weirdness today around
>>> 19:00 UTC.
>>
>> I have no idea how much power disruption would be needed to cause that
>> amount
>> of change in the power distribution, but I see that there is a few MW of
>> solar
>> generation in that general quadrant of the state. I don't know if the
>> shadow
>> traversing the solar generation plants could explain the behavior, but
>> would
>> probably be the first easy answer I would look for.
>>
>> --
>> Chris Caudle
>>
>>
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