it can not be legally posted can it?
First chaper: http://www.stepheniemeyer.com/eclipse.html Then click the click here to read the first chapter of Eclipse
Please rewrite. Most books have a chapter 1. Title is needed here.
"Could you please tell me where the exchange desk is in this hotel?"
I cannot answer as by " here " could be anywhere. Please specify the area.
Right here! http://www.freewebs.com/twilight_fan_club/newsflash.htm
This is clearly a homework question and while we are here to help, we are not here to do your homework. If you have specific questions, please ask.
Please do not try. However, you can use a pinhole eclipse viewer that will let you safely see the sun. Here is a link to instructions from NASA. Enjoy- and DO NOT try to look directly at the sun- during an eclipse or at any other time. https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/learn/project/how-to-make-a-pinhole-camera/
what chapter in the schwa was here did antsy long to be noticed
Please do not try. However, you can use a pinhole eclipse viewer that will let you safely see the sun. Here is a link to instructions from NASA. Enjoy- and DO NOT try to look directly at the sun- during an eclipse or at any other time. https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/learn/project/how-to-make-a-pinhole-camera/
i dont know what that was for, but ok. here is the last comment.
Yes. The Earth is much larger than the Moon, so the shadow of the Earth is larger than the shadow of the Moon. And a solar eclipse happens here on the Earth, as the Moon's shadow crosses the Earth; at most, an observer at one spot on the Earth will experience an eclipse that lasts 7 minutes, 30 seconds. (If you could travel across the Earth while remaining in the shadow, like NASA's C141 transport with the large telescope, you could experience a couple of HOURS of eclipse.) For an observer here on Earth, the lunar eclipse happens ON THE MOON, so we can see the whole thing, up to about 90 minutes in duration.
It hasn't been translated.....yet. It should be by winter 2011.