We live in a special time,Lily LaBeau Archives at least when it comes to space.
On Monday, a total solar eclipse will pass over a 70-mile-wide swath of the United States, stretching from Oregon to South Carolina.
But don't take it for granted. We won't always have the chance to experience total solar eclipses from Earth.
SEE ALSO: How to watch the total solar eclipse from anywhere on EarthAccording to astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, eventually, we won't be able to see these kinds of total eclipses from Earth at all.
In about 500 million to 1 billion years, the moon will be too far from our planet to totally blot out our closest star in the sky.
"There will be a day where the moon will never in its orbit be large enough to completely cover the sun," Tyson said in a new video.
Via GiphyEver since its formation billions of years ago, the moon has been progressively getting farther and farther from Earth in its orbit.
In fact, according to Tyson, the moon was about 20 times larger in our sky when it first formed by comparison to its apparent size now.
Each year, the moon moves about 1.5 inches, 3.8 centimeters, farther from our planet in its orbit.
While future occupants of our planet will be able to see eclipses -- which occur anytime the moon passes between the Earth and the sun, casting a shadow -- they just won't have a chance to see the moon fully cancel out the light of our star.
All you Valentine's Day haters are wrong. There, I've said it.Reddit is obsessed with bridges right now, from Golden Gate to JeffDonald Trump has his day in 'The People's Court' on 'SNL'Here are all the winners of the 2017 GrammysRihanna took fashion to new heights with Amelia EarhartThese twins battled each other for 58 words in the final round of a spelling beeCeeLo Green showed up to the Grammys looking like CJames Corden slipped a Donald Trump dig into his Grammys openerA meandering 'Homeland' finally finds its focus in episode 4 (RECAP)One newspaper accidentally used photo of Alec Baldwin instead of President TrumpThis cosplayer might be the most convincing Taylor Swift lookalike yetiMessage is the only thing keeping me on an iPhoneYogi dressed in white powerfully defies period shame on InstagramYou'll love Katy Perry's Grammys performance unless you're Donald TrumpTracy Morgan delivers Destiny’s Child burn from Beyoncé’s womb on 'SNL''Infinity War' teaser puts Avengers, SpiderWhen the trolls come at you over birth control coverage, here's what to sayMelissa McCarthy is back and super mad as Sean Spicer on 'SNL'Al Jarreau, whose smooth voice was a jazz legend for decades, dead at 7611 Valentine's gifts for your f*ck buddy Trudeau and Obama had a cozy date night and everyone is swooning Best Apple deal: The Apple Pencil (2nd Gen) is 39% off at Amazon Wordle today: The answer and hints for February 23 U.S. swings from world leader on the environment to a tiny footnote NYT's The Mini crossword answers for February 22 New Google ad policy bans fake endorsements like the notorious 'Shark Tank keto gummies' Best Android phone deal: Buy a Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5, get $150 in Amazon credit Spacecraft looks like a 'Star Wars' ship. It just crashed into Earth. How to watch 'Aquaman 2' — streaming release date, Max deals Netflix's 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' does right by the cabbage merchant 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' review: Netflix's live AI leaders, actors, and academics sign letter calling for anti U.S. mayors and governors defy Trump, will stick to Paris agreement anyway New iPhone 15 battery upgrade will make you rethink buying older iPhones Cats have been getting humans to do their bidding for 9,000 years Super rare two Apple is giving iMessage a massive security update Galaxy AI is coming soon to other Samsung devices Even North Korea is blasting Trump for withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement France helpfully corrects Trump's video on climate change
2.3306s , 10114.1640625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Lily LaBeau Archives】,Charm Information Network