Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - Tales of totality: The adventures of an eclipse chaser
Episode Date: March 13, 2024The countdown is on! With less than a month until the total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024, Planetary Radio is buzzing with anticipation. This celestial event will sweep across Mexico, the United Stat...es, and Canada, promising a spectacular view to millions. Jim Bell, a professor from the School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University and former president of The Planetary Society's Board of Directors, will share captivating tales from his global eclipse-chasing journeys. But before diving into the cosmic wonders, we'll bring you the latest updates on the proposed US Presidential Budget. The Planetary Society's space policy experts, Casey Dreier and Jack Kiraly, will explain what this budget proposal means for NASA's funding and future projects. Then, the great Bruce Betts will pop in for What's Up as host Sarah Al-Ahmed looks forward to high-fiving him in person at The Planetary Society's upcoming Eclipse-O-Rama event in Texas, U.S. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/2024-eclipse-chasingSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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Why chase total solar eclipses around the world?
We'll find out this week on Planetary Radio.
I'm Sarah Al-Ahmed of the Planetary Society,
with more of the human adventure across our solar system and beyond.
The countdown to the next total solar eclipse continues.
We are now less than one month from a celestial event that will wow millions of people across Mexico, the United States, and Canada.
Our guest today is Jim Bell, a professor in the School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University,
and the past president of the Planetary Society's Board of Directors.
He'll share beautiful stories about his eclipse-chasing adventures around the
world. But first, we have a fresh off-the-press update on the new U.S. presidential budget request
and what it means for NASA's funding and programs. Our space policy team, Casey Dreyer and Jack
Curley, will explain. Then the great Bruce Betts will pop in for what's up as we look forward to
high-fiving in person at our Eclipsorama event
in Texas, USA. If you love Planetary Radio and want to stay informed about the latest space
discoveries, make sure you hit that subscribe button on your favorite podcasting platform.
By subscribing, you'll never miss an episode filled with new and awe-inspiring ways to know
the cosmos and our place within it. NASA's fiscal year 2025 annual budget request was announced on March 11th.
This is a pivotal moment in the agency's financial planning.
The process starts with a proposal by the White House and culminates with legislation in Congress,
which then has to be approved and signed by the President of the United States.
The budget request outlines allocations for various sectors of NASA,
including human space exploration, space science, and technological advancements.
The budget proposal for the next fiscal year is about $25.4 billion, which is about a 2% increase from the previous year.
It's an interesting situation, considering that NASA's budget for 2024 was only recently approved.
that NASA's budget for 2024 was only recently approved.
The delays to the budgeting process caused many knock-on effects,
including the unfortunate layoffs of hundreds of people at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Given NASA's stature as the largest space exploration organization in the world,
this budget's implications extend beyond the United States,
affecting international partners that are engaging in collaborative space exploration.
Joining us to unpack all of these recent updates are Casey Dreyer, our Chief of Space Policy,
and Jack Curley, our Director of Government Relations here at the Planetary Society.
Hi, Casey and Jack.
Hi, Sarah.
Hi, Sarah.
So when last we met, we were talking about what was going down with the 2024 presidential budget request for NASA budget as we record this about a week and a half ago.
And it wrapped up okay.
Again, it wasn't great.
NASA, relatively speaking, lost 2% of its budget from the year before.
It's actually, its final budget was less than either proposed Senator of the House.
So it's something shrunk even in between the process of its initial proposals and the final outcome.
Nonetheless, there are some good things in there, right?
It's always good to have a budget rather than stay in this period of uncertainty, which
is what led to the layoffs at JPL and other NASA centers that we've been seeing.
So I'll highlight the good things, and then maybe, Jack, you can talk about the bad things.
Oh, I can do that.
The good things. Let's talk about good things.
Neo Surveyor, right? Our planetary defense space telescope got stalwart support from Congress.
Really great to see that. That mission grew in funding this year, keeping it on track for a launch this decade.
That's really important. Huge turnaround for that mission.
We saw Artemis move forward. Artemis has passed yet another political hurdle that in a shrinking budget situation, its budget grew.
So NASA's top line went down, but the chunk devoted to Artemis grew slightly. That's pretty
amazing. That has survived. That's a political test that we have not seen a lunar return program
pass in decades. So that's a good thing to see.
That keeps the project moving forward.
I don't know if I could say on track because it has been slipping in terms of its schedule,
but a lot of things are lining up for Artemis.
So the case has been made there.
The other good thing, which is also kind of a bad thing, which is Mars sample return,
which had the big division between the Senate, which
threatened to cancel the mission and the House, which wanted to give it $950 million, the full
request. It ended up being this weird wishy-washy language that said, you can spend no less than
$300 million. That was the Senate's number. But you're not canceled. We swear. All that Senate
stuff threatening your cancellation, this new budget cap.
We're not agreeing to that.
That is not the case.
You can spend up to $950 if you want.
We're not going to give you the money to do that.
The overall amount of money for planetary science went down by half a billion dollars.
That effectively cut, you know, that cut is basically the cut, you know, absorbed from the rest of the space agency.
So that allowed every other science division to stay flat relative to 2023.
And it allowed NASA other projects to stay flat or grow slightly.
So MSR basically took it on the chin to enable steady funding for every other part of the agency.
And it's kind of interesting.
So a lot of people were worried about this idea that MSR would grow so big,
it would eat everyone's lunch.
Literally the opposite happened.
Everyone else ate MSR's lunch in order to stay nice and sated.
That's to extend this metaphor.
And MSR now is in this really interesting and challenging situation
where it has some political support, but it doesn't have a lot of funding.
But at the end of the day, NASA hasn't even said how they want to move forward.
So they probably didn't need the funding.
Yeah. And probably a good segue into some of the other things that we'll talk about in the FY25 budget as it relates to Mars sample return.
budget as it relates to Mars sample return. But yeah, overall, not a particularly great budget for science, though, Casey, as you note, the cuts fell predominantly on the planetary
science division and specifically on Mars sample return. And that ethos of, well, we're going to
fully support this program, but not give you clear direction as to the exact funding level carries over into FY25.
Two other small programs that I would like to note are Habitable Worlds Observatory actually
has a program office now. It's not in the GoMap, the Great Observatories Maturation
something project program. It actually has a program office.
That was the actual title of the project.
They kind of threw it together. But you're right. I mean, it has some structure now to that program.
Yeah. And located it at the Goddard Space Flight Center, which has historically been
where all of the major space telescopes have been built. The other big note, and I think this is
probably something really near and dear to all of us on this recording as well as the listener, is Veritas got a very strong note of support in the appropriations language with a request encouraging NASA to aim for a launch by the end of the decade.
I wonder how much of that was due in part to the massive public outcry and so many people Planetary Society made that happen.
And that's that's truly extraordinary.
So some good news did come out of all of that, even though it was a very stressful period for a lot of us and for a lot of NASA facilities that were waiting to hear what happened with the 2024 budget.
Now we have this proposed 2025 budget.
How is that different from what came before?
Now we have this proposed 2025 budget. How is that different from what came before?
So this is the start of what last week's budget was the end of. That makes sense.
This is the president's proposal. This kicks off the debate. This sets the terms of the argument,
the discussion. And even though Congress ultimately appropriates the money, all of the details that are included in this president's budget request tend to have a lot of force for things that Congress doesn't directly
address. I always like to put this in perspective. NASA's budget request is around 700 pages long.
It details exactly what the agency intends to do in every single program office and program area that
it does. It's amazing, actually, to read through. Congress's budget for NASA is probably 15 pages.
And so whenever Congress doesn't explicitly kind of tweak something, generally the president's
budget request will be what happens. And so caring about what's in this and being aware of what's in this is very important,
even though Congress ultimately appropriates the money.
And so what we're seeing here is the start of moving forward for fiscal year 25, which
begins October 1st.
We will not have a congressional election.
I feel pretty comfortable predicting the future on this one.
We'll see.
We won't have a budget probably by then because this little thing called the presidential election in the
United States is happening a month later. Very likely they will delay this budget consideration
until after that and maybe even into the next Congress that gets seated next January based on,
you know, who wins and who loses and what power will be in, who knows.
So this is a start of a long conversation, but it sets, again, these terms.
And what we're seeing is that the president's budget request now is operating under these debt limit spending limits that were passed by Congress and agreed to by the White House
last year.
This is one of the reasons why NASA shrank in 2024.
And this is a reason why NASA will almost certainly continue to at least
stay flat, but in this restricted budget situation going forward. And they request $25.4 billion. So
it's a 2% increase, basically keeps it flat with what NASA had in 23 before Congress cut it.
But again, you know, we all know that this inflation
has been going on. The dollar doesn't buy as much as it used to. And if you run the numbers,
NASA's buying power in 2024, assuming NASA's own predicted inflation levels,
are going to be down over a billion and a half dollars compared to what it had at its peak in
2020. Right. So in a sense, even though there's been some modest increases,
but even compounded with these cuts,
NASA is losing close to $2 billion worth of its buying power
as it's trying to do these incredible,
send humans back to the moon,
build a habitable world's observatory,
send and retrieve samples from Mars.
All these major scientific and human spaceflight programs
that they're told to do, right?
This isn't NASA begging to do this.
This is directed by the White House and Congress.
We just don't have the money to do this in this scenario.
So what do you think that means for programs
like Mars Sample Return or the Artemis program?
Well, it's just more uncertainty, right?
Into an already uncertain situation.
Can we just talk about how weird the Mars sample return budget request was, though?
I've never seen that. And I feel like I'm pretty well read in congressional budget requests,
maybe having a few dozen read under my belt. And I've never seen TBD be listed for any program, let alone
the flagship top priority of the planetary science community, as not only said by the previous
Decadal survey, the current Decadal survey, but also the independent review board report that
came out last year and Congress's own legislation that funds NASA for
the rest of this year very clearly states this is the top priority for the community.
And yet it's to be determined what that funding request is.
Literally, right? This isn't a metaphor. You know, you look at a budget, you usually put in numbers
to make things add up and you know because dollars come in
quantifiable chunks um you can count them they're quantized and this year i've again literally never
seen anything like this you go to the mars sample return section in planetary science there are no
numbers there's not even it's just literally the three letters TBD. And it speaks to, I think,
that while Mars sample return kind of survived last year, weakened, it is definitely not out
of the woods. And again, I think this goes to the situation that NASA, at the time of release of
this budget, has not actually proposed what this reconstituted,
replanned Mars sample return is going to be. And so, I mean, I feel a little bit for the,
you know, the budgeting office at the White House saying, you don't know what you want to do.
Well, what can I, why even give you money? What am I talking about? What do you need?
And they can't say. I don't know why it's taking so long. It's probably not a great situation to be
in. But it's just astonishing to see that TBD. And the problem is, and what happened is as a
consequence, that you have a budget for planetary science, which is not altogether bad at 2.7
billion. But of course, it's literally just missing TBD plus a number equals that number.
It's not adding anything. And they said, we got confirmation from Nikki Fox, who's the
Associate Administrator for NASA Science Mission Directorate, yesterday at a press briefing.
If they do have a path forward for MSR, which we expect in the next few months,
and they do want to request money for it, that planetary top line of 2.7 will not increase in this budget. There's no extra money for Mars
sample return. And that means they're setting this up in a way that I feel is very potentially
divisive of, here's this great budget you could have for everything else, but you want to do Mars
sample return? Well, choose which program you want to do Mars Sample Return?
Well, choose which program you want to sacrifice to Mars Sample Return,
which of course only makes you enemies.
And so this is a real serious issue that we have not resolved.
There is some money kind of tucked away that can be put towards Mars Sample Return.
It is not enough to move forward in any level of a realistic aspect for the program. You will
need to take it from somewhere. Or I think what Jack and I will be making the case and what
hopefully you as a Planetary Society member will help us make the case for is that Congress needs
to come in and provide this money from somewhere else. Like this cannot, we cannot set up, and this
is Jack and I, we've been talking about this. This budget is set up to continue and enforce the circular
firing squad of pitting NASA science projects against other NASA science projects in this
zero-sum game that will only end up undermining all of them. This is not a science budget that
enables any flagship mission, whether it's Mars Sample Return, whether it's Habitable Worlds
Observatory, whether it's Heliophysics, you just don't have the money to do any of these.
And if every science division starts fighting against every other science division, that
weakness will create this political opportunity for science in general to lose funding. And I
fear that's our big philosophical fear about this budget is that it is almost designed exquisitely to
enforce this mentality rather than create a unifying, we need to stand together for NASA
space science and exploration. And we saw that with just what happened last week, which I will
note, I think is probably the shortest lag time between a fiscal year appropriation being passed and
the president's budget request coming out.
The back and forth that happened over the last year, the fighting over whether it was
Mars sample return or the heliophysics budget line, all of the inviting within the scientific
community and between certain stakeholders within the Congress
resulted in a lower overall budget for NASA science.
And so you can't have a truly balanced portfolio that enables these flagship missions.
And it's not just the flagships, but it's also the principal investigator-led missions
like VERITAS, like DAVINCI, DRAGONFLY, the research's also the principal investigator-led missions like Veritas, like DaVinci,
Dragonfly, the research programs, the future planning, the administration of existing missions.
You can't have a balanced portfolio, which is the number one recommendation of every decadal survey
that's come out in the last five years is balance above all else. You can't have that with a top
line number that is essentially a $1 billion cut from the high point in fiscal year 2020.
Yeah. And so now's the time. And we saw this with Eritas. We saw this with a number of actions
within the last few years that members of the Planetary Society and supporters of the Planetary Society and planetary exploration stood up and said, we want this. Neo Surveyor is a great example.
Veritas is a great example that we have power to influence this process. And now is that time to
get involved. And so please go to planetary.org slash action and send letters to your members of Congress, encouraging them to
support a robust and increased science budget for fiscal year 2025 that enables true balance
of the portfolio. And then consider coming to our day of action on April 29th. If you want to take
that next step, the three of us will be there. We're really looking forward to this opportunity to be on the ground with you advocating for space science in a way that truly makes a difference,
that is memorable. Members of Congress and their staff tell me all the time about the
conversations they've had with space advocates like yourself. And this is truly the best way
that you, as a resident of the United States, can influence
public policy as it relates to planetary exploration.
So please, planetary.org slash action and consider joining the Day of Action on April
29th, 2024.
Yeah, if you're going to do it, this is the right year to do it.
We're pushing up against a lot.
And again, I think these cuts happen to programs
like NASA Science or even just NASA in general, right? We haven't touched on it. Artemis does
okay in this. It grows slightly, but basically stays flat. That's a very difficult project to
do too. These cuts happen to agencies like NASA because they think it's politically easy
to do it, that there's no consequences for doing it. And the more we can show them otherwise
by showing up in Washington, D.C., by writing your representatives, if you live in the United States,
the more we can make the case that that is not true, that people are paying attention.
And that's ultimately one of the big arguments you make is that this is not some, you know, bank of NASA that's used to pay for their other pet projects.
These are really important, science-driven, exploration-motivated, peaceful, purpose-broadly unifying things that we do.
One of the most beautiful and I think pure things we do as a nation, as a species.
And it's not worth kneecapping that, right, when things get
tough. And so, this is something we're going to move forward. I will mention that if you want to
look at all these numbers that we're talking about and a detail and summary of the 24 and the 25 NASA
budget, planetary.org slash advocacy has links to all of those. We maintain a pretty detailed NASA
budget tracking page.
And if you really are a quant and love numbers,
I have detailed historical tables of NASA's budget
since 1958 and very detailed budgeting tables
for all of planetary science since 1960.
And you can see the trends of planetary exploration,
trends of NASA spending relative to discretionary spending
and outliers and all the other kind of fun budgeting stuff. So you can pick your level
of insanity for a budget following. That's all at planetary.org advocacy if you want to look at that.
As someone who loves numbers, I'm really glad that we have that level of detail for people
who really want to get into it. I love numbers, too, until TBD started showing up.
Those are, that's not a number.
I can't add those.
Just putting notes on our tracking tables.
Completely crazy.
I had lots of NANs on Excel spreadsheets, right?
Like it's lots of value errors.
That's completely nuts. And then again,
this is an unprecedented situation. MSR is really just in a wild situation.
But thankfully, we've seen the power of our advocates to come out over the last few months.
It has been so wonderful to see how many people have been using our Action Center to send in
letters. And I think that this is going to be another one of those moments that we'll look
back on right now. It's a little dicey, but we'll look back on with a little bit
of pride knowing that so many people cared and that they made their voice heard on this.
That's a great way to think of it. And it is. It reminds people about what's at stake. And we've
had it really good for the last 10 years, really. And that's changing. And this happens. I've been
through this at least once before. And you can come out stronger on the other side of this. And that's the thing. If you survive, if MSR survives a near programmatic death experience, it will probably be better for it. It will be stronger as a political support. It will probably be a better design. It will have much more attention and focus. Same for a lot of other flagship missions.
So, you know, this is part of living in a democracy at the end of the day.
I can complain about this, but it's what we have to deal with.
We have to make the case.
We never can stop making the case because democracies are a constant discussion about our priorities and our desires and our shared values. And so in a way, we can think of this as...
Only old millennials reference the Simpsons anymore.
Is that true?
But a Christ-atunity is what Homer Simpson would say.
And we have this ability, again, to really drum up.
And again, that seeing the member response and seeing the support is always just really...
It's not just heartwarming for Jack and I. it's very encouraging and I think valuable for people too.
Well, I'm looking forward to joining both of you in Washington, D.C. in a little over one month.
And I think, first of all, I'll go out, we'll have our minds blown by that total solar eclipse,
and we'll use that good space will to take everyone to go vouch for NASA's funding and
for space funding in general across the world. Now is a beautiful time for us all to work together and hopefully help save these programs.
We're on the cusp of the future. Let's do it together. Stand together.
Thanks, Jack and Casey.
Thanks, Sarah.
Now, we turn to the upcoming celestial event that has people across North America gearing up with anticipation.
The total solar eclipse on April 8th, 2024. For many in Mexico, the United States and Canada,
this is going to be their first total solar eclipse. But for our next guest, Dr. Jim Bell,
this is just the next quest in his eclipse chasing adventures. Eclipse chasers are passionate about
experiencing and observing solar and lunar eclipses from various locations around the world. But of the different types of eclipses that we
experience here on Earth, let me tell you, total solar eclipses are definitely the most spectacular.
The motivation behind eclipse chasing is multifaceted, but at its core, it combines
an interest in astronomy with the love of adventure and travel. Total solar
eclipses aren't necessarily rare on our planet. They occur about once every 18 months, but you
have to be in very specific places and times to observe them. The difference between a partial
solar eclipse and a total solar eclipse can be a matter of kilometers, and the experience is
completely different. It can be hundreds of
years before that location has another opportunity to experience the same phenomenon. That means that
enthusiasts often travel great distances, sometimes to remote or challenging locations, in order to
witness these events. I've only experienced one total solar eclipse so far, but Dr. Jim Bell has
witnessed many more. Jim is a professor in
the School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University and the principal
investigator for NASA's Perseverance rover Mastcam-Z instruments. He was also the president
of the Planetary Society's Board of Directors from 2008 to 2020. Many of Jim's eclipse excursions
have been with the Planetary Society's travel partners
at BetChart Expeditions. They offer natural history and space travel opportunities to
people around the world. Here are some of Jim Bell's eclipse-chasing adventures.
Hi, Jim. Thanks for joining me at Planetary Society headquarters.
Sarah, it's spectacular to be here back in the vault, and it's spectacular to see how you are doing
such a great job with Planetary Radio.
Thank you.
That's so kind of you.
And for anyone who doesn't get that reference, our recording studio used to be a bank vault.
It's a whole side story.
But I wanted to talk to you about your experiences eclipse chasing, because from what I've heard,
you've seen so many of them.
And this is a personal aspiration for me.
I would love to see that many.
Yes.
I became an eclipse chaser, total solar eclipse chaser to be specific, in 2010, actually through the Planetary Society.
And I was approached by a tour group that we work with called the Betchart Expeditions. And I lovingly refer to what they do as nerd tours,
because they take people, they see eclipses, they go to see the aurora, they go to Galapagos and
Antarctica, you know, it's nature and astronomical kinds of tours. And they attract just wonderful,
amazing people, including lots of Planetary Society members who are just super
excited about the night sky. And there were enough members going on that trip that Betchart reached
out to the society and said, could you send a representative to help give some presentations
and talk about the astronomical event and its significance and just make a link between all
these society members and the organization and all that. So I said, sure, why not?
And that was in 2010 to Tahiti, and it was a just spectacular event.
And I have seen seven total solar eclipses since then with the Planetary Society members on these wonderful tours.
And the upcoming event in April will be number eight for me.
What was it about your first experience
seeing that total solar eclipse that continues to draw you back to this?
Yeah, you know, it's one thing to understand it academically, right? Here's where the moon is,
here's where the sun is, here's where the earth is. Occasionally the shadow crosses the earth,
and I teach introductory astronomy. So, you know, it's one thing to know academically what's happening, but it turns out it's an entirely different thing to feel it, to sense it, and to see the disk of the
moon completely block the sun and to look up in the sky to see something that you have never seen
before in your life and only will rarely see in your life in the future if you're lucky to be at the right place.
And to me, it sounds silly, but kind of my monkey brain took over.
Something deep in my cerebral cortex, it was saying, whoa, this is not right.
Something is wrong here.
The sky should not look like that.
And that was kind of mixed in with just the awe and wonder and beauty
of just seeing one of the most spectacular celestial phenomena that you could ever see.
I felt the same thing when I was looking up at the eclipse in 2017.
No amount of academic study is going to prepare you for what you see.
And I really did.
It's like I could feel the trepidation of my ancestors in my bones almost.
It was such a strange experience.
Yes, yes. And, you know, I had seen partial solar eclipses before.
And even like partials in the 90 percent are just not the same as completely shutting off the sun, you know, and just experiencing that and being in that in that shadow.
It was life-changing.
What particularly was it that's so unsettling about it? Was it the experience of the sky
darkening or were there any other experiences during the eclipse that really made that such
an experience for you? Well, I mean, it was partly, it's not just a sky phenomenon,
it's a meteorological phenomenon. It got a little chilly. It got windy.
Where we were was by the ocean. You could really feel the ocean breezes. You could see
way off in the horizon. You could still see that it was sunny way out there, out in the ocean,
because the shadow only has a limited extent. It was also zoological, right? There were birds
that started chirping. Small mammals started coming out of the trees.
And so it was really a couple of minutes of just weirdness that you don't normally experience.
And that was kind of fun.
The other part of it was that we were, the group was on a remote atoll in the middle
of the Pacific, a tiny little island called Anaa, A-N-A-A, which is part of
French Polynesia. And there are only about 400 people that live there year round. And this group
of 50 of us showed up on a charter flight and completely changed the social dynamics of the
island. And they didn't have any hotels or restaurants. So they opened their homes to us.
They turned their school into our hotel.
They were making meals for us, music and dance shows. Just being able to interact with the rest
of the world was a big deal for them. And actually, one of the most amazing parts of that trip was
that the eclipse was great, but it wasn't the highlight. It was really spending time with these
people out in this remote area who are trying to build up tourism. They want people to come visit, and it's just a
spectacular place. I remember we took a boat ride across the lagoon to this beach on the other side,
about 10 miles away. Many boats, the fishermen use their boats to ship us all. And we get to
this beach, and it's one of these things, if I can paint a picture of a white sand beach with swooping coconut trees, you know, and there's nobody there.
It was just absolutely spectacular. We spent just a magical day in the middle of nowhere
to watch the shadow of the moon. That sounds like a beautiful experience.
It was a great experience. Yes. We'll be right back with the rest of my interview with
Jim Bell after this short break. The total solar eclipse is almost here. Join me and the Planetary
Society on April 7th and 8th for Eclipsorama 2024, our Camp Miss Total Solar Eclipse Camping
Festival in Fredericksburg, Texas. See this rare celestial event with us
and experience a whopping 4 minutes and 24 seconds of totality. The next total solar eclipse like
this won't be visible in North America until 2044. So don't miss this wonderful opportunity
to experience the solar system as seen from Spaceship Earth.
Get your Eclipsorama 2024 tickets today at Eclipsorama2024.com.
Hi, it's your old friend Matt Kaplan of the Planetary Society.
A total solar eclipse is coming to North America on April 8th.
More than 600 million of you will be able to see at least a partial eclipse,
and over 40 million people live in the path of totality.
If you want to be ready to experience this rare cosmic event to the fullest,
take the Planetary Society's online course all about solar and lunar eclipses.
It's only available to Planetary Society members in our wonderful member community.
So join us today at planetary.org slash membership.
That's planetary.org slash membership.
My experience during 2017 was similar, although in a very different location, in that I was in a very small town in the middle of Wyoming.
And just the way that we bonded with the people in that town, the local coffee shop sent all their kids out to bring us coffee.
It was such a moment for all of us to bond together.
And I feel like that's part of what's so interesting about total solar eclipses.
They really make everyone in the area come together in a way that
you don't see around other kinds of celestial phenomena.
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, it's a teachable moment in a lot of ways, right? The educator in me
wants to tell everybody about what's happening and all that. The last one, last year, we went
to East Timor, which is one of the newest nations in the world, just north of Western Australia,
tiny little country. And there it was interesting because there's still a lot of superstition about eclipses.
And some people in the government were telling folks to stay inside. It's dangerous for you.
And yet their education ministry was like, go experience it, use the glasses,
you know, that kind of thing. And so it was a really interesting mix to see this kind of an
event in a developing country and to see that mix of both the old and the new come to life.
And interacting with those folks was great too, and another special experience.
Sounds like I need to go on one of these bed chart expeditions.
Definitely, yes.
It sounds like a lot of fun. Well, I wanted to share with you some of the questions that
our Planetary Society members in the United States had about total solar eclipses, because literally millions of
people are gearing up to go see this. And I'm sure your experiences would help them on their journey.
So Jennifer DeVos from Virginia wanted to know, what keeps you coming back each time?
They're all different. Every one of them is different. And for me, it's the mixture of the location, because they're often in, like you said, small,
remote places.
It turns out every single spot on Earth will experience a total solar eclipse about once
every 300 years.
So they happen all over the place.
And so it's a great opportunity to travel to sometimes really exotic and different places that I would never go otherwise.
And then the events themselves are all dramatically different.
Sometimes the sun is low in the sky.
Sometimes it's partly cloudy.
I had one of them that was completely clouded out.
And that was a little bit sad because it got dark.
And everybody knew what was going on.
And yet there was this deck of clouds between us and the event.
So that was a little bit sad.
Another one I got to see from an airplane at 40,000 feet in the air.
And that was the most spectacular view of the solar corona.
You could see the magnetic field lines and the sun's corona from that altitude above so much of the Earth's atmosphere.
I mean, that was spectacular.
So it's that mix of locations and the variability of the event.
And then in my case, traveling with the tour groups, traveling with Planetary Society members,
you meet so many interesting people from all over the world with such amazing backgrounds.
And like you said, you're bonding together over this one incredibly amazing celestial
event.
That leads really well into another question
that someone asked. Robert Wilmore from Washington wanted to know, what is the funnest,
largest turnout from a nearby community that you've experienced at one of these eclipses?
Oh boy, I think, yeah, actually probably two, I'll have two answers to that. One,
the 2017 one in Wyoming, we were at a ski resort. And people would take the ski lifts up to where you would get off and ski down.
Of course, there was no snow because it was summertime, right?
It was a big plateau up there.
And there were, I don't know, maybe 1,000 people up there.
There was a band.
The band was playing Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd and the eclipse part of it.
And it was just a party atmosphere and
everybody was in a joyous mood and the event was beautiful. And from that scene, you could see 360
degrees around the horizon. And that was a big party. And people from all over the country,
all over the world were there. The second answer, probably tied for first place, was that first eclipse that I saw in
2010 on the atoll of Ana'a. And there were 50 of us in the group and 400 people who live on that
small island. And almost everybody was there on the beach. And it was, you know, for the people
of this small community, it was the first time almost all of them had seen a total solar eclipse.
And so they had a lot of questions about it.
And we had lots of glasses we were passing out.
And I gave a lecture.
We had to set up this makeshift screen for the projector with a bed sheet on the end of a pier.
And so everybody's on the pier, which is only about 10 feet wide, kind of sitting.
And so everybody's on the pier, which is only about 10 feet wide, kind of sitting.
And I'm giving my talk.
And the sun is setting.
And Mars is off in the distance.
And I was talking about Mars rovers and space exploration.
And it was just like magic, you know.
And then the eclipse happened.
And it was just, it was great.
I bet people there are still talking about that to this day.
Yeah.
And I would love to find a way to go back. And we made a lot of friends in a very short amount of time. Michael O'Brien from Michigan
wanted me to ask you, what did you enjoy most about the people that you met along the way?
I think it's been that common interests, despite dramatically different backgrounds of everybody
involved. You know, you're all there to focus on
this rare celestial alignment and, you know, the coincidence of the moon being roughly the same
angular diameter as the sun in the sky and the amazing ability of science to predict exactly
where that shadow will pass decades, centuries in advance, you know, and just getting
to meet folks who, you know, regardless of what they do in their life or their job, their education,
their age, whatever, regardless, everyone's there for the same thing, to really soak this in,
to enjoy it and to celebrate these kinds of amazing celestial events.
After the 2017 eclipse, well, first you get stuck in the traffic jam. So we were stuck in a traffic
jam for maybe eight hours. But afterwards, we stopped at a restaurant and everyone at that
restaurant had been to see the total solar eclipse from different locations, from different states.
And it just sparked a conversation between all of us. The people that you meet along the way
is almost one of my favorite parts,
right after how absolutely mind-blowing the eclipse itself is.
Totally agree.
Absolutely.
Tim Robinson from Texas wanted me to ask, what is the longest totality you've experienced?
Oh, gosh.
I think, I'm trying to remember which one it was.
It might have been one that I saw in Indonesia.
We went to the island of Sulawesi, which is one of the mosquito-borne disease capitals of the world.
So everybody had to get very well vaccinated.
And that was, I want to say, maybe three minutes or so, three and change.
So it just has happened that they haven't been like super, super long, but also not super short.
But it's still, it doesn't matter how long they are.
They seem to go by in an instant. It's over way too fast. The first thing out of everybody's mouth when the sun
comes back is, oh, really? That was it? It was over that fast? So not long enough, I guess that's
the answer. Time is relative, but in those moments, it seems way more relative than it should be. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This actually comes to this next point because a lot of us people that want to go see the eclipse are worried about the weather.
And clearly you've experienced all kinds of weather during these events.
So Devin O'Rourke from Colorado wanted me to ask you just to address the Eclipse-O-ipsorama anxiety. If the weather doesn't cooperate, is it worth staying where you are,
or should you try to move to a location that might have better weather as quickly as possible?
Yeah, it just depends, right? If it's a solid deck of clouds, it's not going to help. If it's
big puffy clouds from here and there, and you have mobility, you're not stuck in a traffic jam or
something like that, then I have known people who have done that, especially people on the ocean who are watching eclipses have the ability to move the
boat in different places. So, you know, hopefully the meteorologists on TV and the internet will be
watching closely and helping people do that. You know, there's, I think, very good odds of
clear enough skies in the U.S. southwest and in Mexico.
It gets more dicey as you head towards the northeast, right?
And it is April.
It's springtime, early springtime.
The weather can be all over the place, right?
It could be snowing in places.
It could be crystal clear.
So probably if it is cloudy, it'll be like a big cloud deck and people are just going to have to say, darn it.
It's going to get dark and it's going to get light again.
But if you do have the mobility and some good maps or a connection to a good weather personality kind of person, then, yeah, you can make some moves.
I do feel for all of our friends in the Northeast and up into Canada.
Yeah, I know they want to see it as well, and I'm sure some people will,
but fingers crossed. I hope we all have great weather.
Could happen, absolutely.
Craig Griffin from Pennsylvania wanted to know,
what is the most exotic place that you viewed one of these eclipses?
My goodness. There's a list of exotic places.
I've mentioned the atoll of Ana'a in the middle of the Pacific.
And that's, you know, if you've ever used Google Earth, you know, you can spin the Earth to different orientations.
You can spin the Earth so you just see ocean, like barely see Alaska, a little bit of South America, New Zealand.
But it's like the ocean planet.
You can spin it to a latitude and longitude.
And Ana'a is right in the middle of that. So literally the middle of nowhere. Sulawesi in Indonesia, part of Indonesia that most people don't travel
to for tourism, that was really exotic and kind of jungly. High altitude, 40,000 feet
above off the coast of Iceland in an airplane, watching it outside the airplane window, which
they had made sure to clean really well for everybody on the
plane ahead of time. That was really cool. East Timor, I mentioned that last year, a tiny little
new country that is really an emerging nation and super proud of their recent independence
and a mixture of the still the superstition about what's going on in the sky and the science and the
education side that was that was pretty exotic and then you know this year i'll be in durango
with betchart and planetary society members part of mexico i'd never been to a beautiful
part of the country they're telling us they're going to set up to observe in in a town square
and we're expecting a bunch of the townspeople to come out. We'll be armed with lots of eclipse glasses, keep everybody safe
until the totality happens, and hopefully have a chance to educate lots of folks about
the coolness of the sun, moon, and sky. I mean, really, if anybody out there is
listening and wants to be the hero of the eclipse, get yourself a giant bag of eclipse glasses.
Particularly as you approach these events, they sell out everywhere. So when you show up with a and wants to be the hero of the eclipse, get yourself a giant bag of eclipse glasses. Yes.
Particularly as you approach these events, they sell out everywhere.
So when you show up with a bag of 50 eclipse glasses, people will literally sing for you.
Yes, yes, absolutely. And it is really cool to be able to watch the sun with proper eye protection
as the moon slowly moves across the disk of the sun,
because it takes more than an hour for that to happen. It's really
slow. And even though the totality is only a few minutes at best, then it's over and the moon
starts to move off again. And so you can watch it again with the glasses. So yes, keep your eyes
safe out there and don't take off your glasses until that moment of totality. And you'll know
when that moment is because everyone's going to be singing and dancing and yelling and drawing their arms up in the air and screaming and having
a great time. And there are all kinds of really cool things that you can see, even when it's not
in full totality. There's a lot of really beautiful effects that happen. Have you built any really
cool pinhole projectors or anything like that? You know, I didn't, but it turns out you can use
trees to do that.
If you're near a tree and you just watch the sunlight dappling through the leaves of the tree,
there's like an infinite number of tiny little pinhole cameras there that nature is creating for you.
And you look on the ground under the tree and you see these little crescent suns.
And they get sharper and sharper as the moon gets closer and closer to covering the sun.
That's pretty cool.
So, yes, but you can also, a very simple, you know, a little pinhole in a postcard,
a pinhole in the end of a shoebox, look at the other side of the shoebox,
pinhole in a piece of paper.
I've seen people use colanders like you use for draining pasta.
They make really nice pinhole cameras and you can project the images
of the sun onto the ground. So lots of do-it-yourself ideas. Yeah. Last time I combined
some reading glasses with a piece of paper so I could use the lens to focus the pinhole.
Very good. That was pretty fun. But the images I saw from the last annular solar eclipse we had
here in the United States in October of just these
beautiful ring patterns under the trees. It was something so surreal and gorgeous that you really
don't get to see all the time. No, again, unusual celestial occurrence. Absolutely.
You've seen so many of these. Do you think you're ever going to get bored of the experience?
No. You know, a colleague, a late colleague, Jay Passikoff from Williams College, who passed away recently, he started seeing eclipses and studying them as an astronomer back in the 50s.
And I don't know how many he saw, dozens and dozens of them.
And he said the same thing.
Everyone is different.
He had all kinds of great advice for, you know, what to tell people to expect and all that. And
one of his best pieces of advice was that people show up with cameras and tripods and equipment.
To me, it is a wide angle human eye experience. I think people who've seen a lot of them,
they get good at photographing them. And if we're traveling together, I'll just trust them to take
great pictures and share them later.
But for me, it's just open your eyes and take it in in a wide-angle way that cameras just can't do.
So that was some of Jay's advice as well.
I agree.
It's one of those moments, you know, people say this when you're at, say, a concert or something.
Put down your phone.
Look at the concert.
Experience the moment.
This is like the most extreme version of that.
Many people are going to be getting images of this, and it's going to take a lot of work and effort.
But if you can avoid it, just actually be in the moment and stare up,
because it will be something you will remember for the rest of time.
Absolutely. Those seconds are precious when you're in that shadow,
and you don't want to spend them fumbling around with your camera, right?
So, yeah, I agree.
I said this in a previous show, but we are really, really lucky to be able to see these events on Earth.
As you said earlier, the only reason we can actually observe total solar eclipses
is because we're lucky enough to live in a place and a time where the moon and the sun are the same angular size on our sky.
And you're an eclipse chaser here on Earth, but were I an extraterrestrial
listening to this conversation, I'd be coming to Earth right now. I feel like interstellar
eclipse chasing is something that should probably exist out there somewhere.
Absolutely. And it's interesting because those in the Mars rover world, we take
movies of Phobos and Deimos eclipsing the sun at Mars, and they don't cover the sun. Phobos and Deimos eclipsing the sun at Mars. And they don't cover the sun. Phobos covers maybe a third.
So it's not the same kind of thing.
And then, you know, the moon is slowly spiraling away from the Earth, right, because of tidal energy dissipation.
It's slowly moving away.
And so sometime in millions of years, there won't be any more total solar eclipses on the Earth.
So we've got to enjoy them while we can.
What would you say to the people who are still on the fence about going to this next total solar
eclipse? Because I understand it's quite a privilege to have the time and the money to go
do this, but I believe it is worth it. What do you think?
Yeah, no, certainly if you can. It's a school day, right? So it's tough. But they don't come
very often. There's not a good one in the U. the US for another 20 years, I think, maybe 2045, if memory serves. And so this will be, for folks
in the US, one of the easiest ones to get to in a long time. So yeah, if you can find a way,
go for it. And even if you can't get to that path of totality, just the path of a partial eclipse is going to cover much of the
country. And so, you know, you can experience that with the glasses or with your local astronomy
club and their telescopes or your local planetarium at the community college or the library, whatever.
There'd be lots of ways to experience this or even online. I've heard from some Planetary Society
members that they don't live in the path of totality, so they're going to be experiencing the partial, but they're going to be
tuning in for our live stream of the eclipse with Everyday Astronaut. So if anybody out there wants
to watch that anywhere around the world, you can experience the eclipse with us, because this is a
moment for all of humanity to really kind of marvel at our place in space. This is not an opportunity
that comes all the time. Absolutely. I hope you have a really beautiful April 8th and that the weather treats you and everyone
else kindly.
You too. All of us. Yes. Yes. Enjoy.
Thanks so much, Jim.
The newest edition of our quarterly magazine, The Planetary Report, just dropped, and it's
all about total solar eclipses. I'll put a link for it on the page for this episode of
Planetary Radio. It's free to
everyone on our website, but Planetary Society members will also receive a copy in their mailbox.
Before we move on, I want to send a heartfelt thank you and our condolences to our partners
at BetChart Expeditions. Sadly, Margaret BetChart, one of the founders and a great friend of the
Planetary Society, recently passed away. Thank you, Margaret, for everything that you did to help us share the wonders of the sky
with people around the world. You will be missed. Now let's check in with Dr. Bruce Betts,
the chief scientist of the Planetary Society for What's Up.
Bruce! Sarah! We are less than a month away from this total solar eclipse in North America. I cannot
believe it. What? Wait, there's a total solar eclipse? You didn't know? That's so cool.
I'm so hyped for this. Very exciting. I keep flashing back to 2017 and what that moment was
like for me and wondering how this is going to be different. I think being surrounded by
Planetary Society members is really going to elevate the experience. But even back then,
I was surrounded by space people that I loved. So I think sharing the moment is going to be sweet.
I was surrounded by 10,000 strangers that weren't space people. So,
you know, parked in a field in Oregon. So this will be different.
It will be. This is going to be so awesome.
We'll be at Eclipsorama.
And we actually got a comment from one of our Planetary Society members in our member
community that mentioned Eclipsorama coming up.
Laura Monaghan from California, USA wrote in a comment about our previous episode on
National Geographic's documentary, The Space Race, and said it was wonderful to actually see
the space race the other day and then listen to the interviews that we did. She says that she
plans to visit Ed Dwight's African American History Museum in Texas after Eclipsorama,
which is going to be really cool. I'm hoping that I'm going to get to bump into Laura and so many
other Planetary Society members I haven't had a chance to meet yet because I'm going to have a little table in our activity tent so people can come by and say hi and record
little bits of their eclipse experience with me. How cool. What are you going to get up to at
Eclipsorama? Whatever I'm told to get up to. I'm hobbling through the fields and then giving talks
about like planetary defense, defending the Earth from asteroid impact and being involved
somewhere around the time of a total eclipse and talking about that. So it should be groovy.
Hopefully it won't be cloudy. Well, you know, if that does happen,
like we'll be sad that we missed the actual eclipse itself, but this is going to be the
largest gathering of Planetary Society members I've ever personally been to. So whether or not we actually get to see
the eclipse, I cannot wait to listen to music with people and play board games and go to all
the talks and hang out in the activity tents and do the meet and greets.
No, it should be great no matter what. You're right.
Exactly. It's going to be a good time.
It's a good time. Yeah.
Now, something I wasn't prepared for
in 2017 when i was watching the eclipse was the idea that we were going to be able to actually
see planets in the middle of the day when the eclipse happened and there was a young man standing
next to me who had prepared for this moment and knew exactly what planets were going to be out
so he could point them out to people so what planets should we keep an eye out for during this next one? Good news, the two planets that are brightest in the sky,
Venus and Jupiter, both in the sky and not that far off from the eclipse sun.
So they should be presumably quite visible.
He might be able to pick up some others, but those will be by far the easiest.
And he'll be wanting to also
look at the corona and all the dumbfounded faces around you. So you won't have as much
time. But although I am looking forward to this, this has like twice, totality is like
twice as long as it was in 2017 ballpark. I'm going to join with you on this one. This
is worth a heck of a lot of excitement.
It's a cool collective moment too, because it's not just going to be us.
It's going to be millions of people across three countries.
Just everyone taking a moment to look up at the sky and really appreciate where we are in the universe.
I don't know.
That's just a level of camaraderie that I'm really looking forward to.
And maybe not the traffic jams afterwards, but, you know, you win some, you lose some.
And maybe not the traffic jams afterwards, but you know, you win some, you lose some.
But at least Eclipsorama will have a lot of things that my Oregon random field didn't have,
like a lot of bathrooms.
Really, that's it.
That would have made it a lot better. So there are bathrooms and security and all the things that are less interesting until you really have to use them.
And food. And traffic
should be better. I think we'll have people moving out on a more spread out basis, I'm hoping,
because of the interest in general and what's going on rather than let's get out of here.
Let's go find a bathroom. Yeah, we'll all continue to hang out and party. I know there's going to be
meet and greets after the eclipse. So there'll be reasons for people to hang out at Eclipsorama afterwards while the rest of the world tries
to drive back home. You're going to love it. Everyone, everywhere. But the people that will
be far away, at least we'll be able to tune into live streams. We'll have one through everyday
astronaut, but I think people all across these three countries are going to be sharing this
as much as they can with the rest of the world. You'll get a partial eclipse, which is still very cool. Not nearly as cool,
but very cool. Those countries, not elsewhere in the world, but anywhere in the world, you can
tune into the live stream if you got that pesky internet thing.
And we do have an article that I believe you helped put together many years ago. That's about
all the upcoming total solar eclipses for the next 10 years.
So if you do live in another country, you're not going to experience this one.
You can take a look at that article.
I'll link it on this page for this episode of Planetary Radio so you can make plans.
Because who knows?
Maybe you live in Africa or the Middle East or somewhere in Asia.
This will happen near you at some point in your lifetime, and you've got to go see one.
Sarah, would you like to hear something i would a little bit of
so you've probably wondered yourself what is the record largest or specifically most massive
payload ever sent to orbit now i am curious, good. Apollo, the Apollo lunar payload, command module, service
module, lunar module, fuel, and another stage and the whole thing, if you include the third stage
and fuel for Earth orbit departure, 140 tons, or for those in some one place, 310,000 pounds.
I wonder how the Artemis program is going to rank against that in the future.
Yeah, similar, but it depends a lot.
They've got a whole growth pattern of different block stages, and so they get more powerful.
That's cool.
And also Starship, if that stops blowing up, has it.
Sometimes you got to crack a few eggs.
Wow.
We see the other side of Sarah.
Clips are so cool.
But sometimes you have to crack a few eggs.
Yep.
That's basically me in an eggshell.
All right, everybody.
Go out there.
Look out in the night sky and think about cracking eggs very carefully.
With Sarah watching you.
Thank you.
And good night.
We've reached the end of this week's episode of Planetary Radio,
but we'll be back next week with Dante Loretta,
the principal investigator for NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission,
as he shares his new book, The Asteroid Hunter.
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