Thumper wrote:Tried to convince my co worker that we were really looking at Venus.
Thumper wrote:I don't remember another alternative explanation being put forth.
I think I posted about this before: We were outside at a big party and big beautiful Venus was hanging low in the western sky after the sun set. I pointed it out to the folks standing next to me. They didn't believe me. I told them that there were plenty of astronomy phone apps that could help them identify many of the night sky objects. They installed one, confirmed it was indeed Venus. Then spent the rest of the night going around with their phone telling everyone, "Hey look! There's Venus. See? My phone tells me so."
SciFiFisher wrote:Thumper wrote:I don't remember another alternative explanation being put forth.
I think I posted about this before: We were outside at a big party and big beautiful Venus was hanging low in the western sky after the sun set. I pointed it out to the folks standing next to me. They didn't believe me. I told them that there were plenty of astronomy phone apps that could help them identify many of the night sky objects. They installed one, confirmed it was indeed Venus. Then spent the rest of the night going around with their phone telling everyone, "Hey look! There's Venus. See? My phone tells me so."
Sad, that they couldn't just believe you.
Thumper wrote:Why would you trust a guy like me?
Rommie wrote:Wait, they don't have windows on this airplane of yours? You can totally see it enroute!
So, everyone I know of in astronomy is pretty tired of super moons, because they happen several times a year and you can't really tell a size difference, so what's the big deal. In fact, our media person in the department was kinda begging multiple times for someone to go give an interview about the super blue blood moon, because we're so fatigued by them.
pumpkinpi wrote:Rommie wrote:Wait, they don't have windows on this airplane of yours? You can totally see it enroute!
So, everyone I know of in astronomy is pretty tired of super moons, because they happen several times a year and you can't really tell a size difference, so what's the big deal. In fact, our media person in the department was kinda begging multiple times for someone to go give an interview about the super blue blood moon, because we're so fatigued by them.
Ditto.
Especially the blood moon because it has a woo-woo origin story. Despite what everyone is reporting now, it is not because the Moon will turn red during an eclipse. If it were, we would have heard of the term "blood moon" for ages.
This is why.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_moon_prophecy
I never heard of it before a year or two ago.
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