• @owenfromcanada
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    1506 months ago

    Yeah I used a pinhole as well. Didn’t notice the giant celestial dong, tho.

    • @Sanctus
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      376 months ago

      Johnson! Get over here! What is this on radar?

      I don’t know, Sir. It looks like a huge…

        • @Vector
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          226 months ago

          Wiener? Any of you kids want another wiener?

          Dad, what’s that?

          I don’t know son, but it’s got great, big…

    • @givesomefucks
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      116 months ago

      Yeah, but the eclipse put a curve on it…

      • qprimed
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        6 months ago

        well, something there is curving space and time. it must be absolutely MASSIVE!

  • Zier
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    176 months ago

    There’s always some dick photobombing…

  • Kokesh
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    126 months ago

    Is that lord Helmet,or are you happy to see the eclipse?

  • El Barto
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    96 months ago

    How is it possible that the eclipse is projected? I thought that all light rays coming from the sun were pretty much parallel given the enormous distance.

    • mozz
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      196 months ago

      Because the sun isn’t a point source, they’re still coming in from different directions depending on what part of the sun they originated from. The sun is far as hell but it’s also big as hell.

    • @givesomefucks
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      106 months ago

      Same principle as a pinhole camera kids make in science class.

      Just a bunch of pinholes.

    • Jake [he/him]
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      86 months ago

      Basically a pinhole camera. The lens is doing the same thing as your eyeball. If your eye can see it, so can the lens.