1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:03,400 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on 2 00:00:03,680 --> 00:00:05,120 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio and. 3 00:00:05,360 --> 00:00:07,640 Speaker 2: Welcome back to Coast to Coast George nor you with you, 4 00:00:07,720 --> 00:00:10,360 Speaker 2: Doctor Sky with us. He is of course a regular 5 00:00:10,440 --> 00:00:14,120 Speaker 2: feature on our program on Mondays giving us reports about 6 00:00:14,160 --> 00:00:18,079 Speaker 2: what's up there. He's going to be a witness seeing 7 00:00:18,079 --> 00:00:21,960 Speaker 2: the solar eclipse on Monday, April eighth, and he's with 8 00:00:22,040 --> 00:00:24,360 Speaker 2: us for a special two hour edition to talk about 9 00:00:24,400 --> 00:00:27,720 Speaker 2: the eclipse and other issues as well. Steven, welcome, Well. 10 00:00:27,640 --> 00:00:30,080 Speaker 3: Good morning, Duorigs. What an honor to be here and 11 00:00:30,120 --> 00:00:32,920 Speaker 3: looking forward to this, so excited to be here. 12 00:00:33,080 --> 00:00:35,879 Speaker 2: Why is everybody so excited about the solar eclipse? I mean, 13 00:00:35,920 --> 00:00:39,080 Speaker 2: the next one's coming around to nineteen in twenty forty four. 14 00:00:39,440 --> 00:00:42,639 Speaker 3: Well, George, it's one of those things that obviously attracts 15 00:00:42,640 --> 00:00:46,080 Speaker 3: people's attentions, and I just wanted to remind everybody that 16 00:00:46,520 --> 00:00:50,440 Speaker 3: in the path of totality, some thirty one million people 17 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:54,880 Speaker 3: have the opportunity to experience it. And it's the uniqueness, George. 18 00:00:54,920 --> 00:00:58,000 Speaker 3: I think it brings together all of these amazing things. 19 00:00:58,000 --> 00:01:01,520 Speaker 3: It brings the spiritual, it brings us scientific, and it 20 00:01:01,560 --> 00:01:04,800 Speaker 3: brings to curious and we know back from the last 21 00:01:04,800 --> 00:01:08,279 Speaker 3: eclipse that we talked about, the one in August twenty 22 00:01:08,319 --> 00:01:11,840 Speaker 3: first of twenty seventeen, George, that was amazing and this 23 00:01:11,880 --> 00:01:14,760 Speaker 3: will be like my sixth events. So we're excited to 24 00:01:14,760 --> 00:01:16,800 Speaker 3: be in Texas reporting live on this. 25 00:01:17,360 --> 00:01:19,800 Speaker 2: Can you hurt your eyes? Though? You know we've talked 26 00:01:19,800 --> 00:01:24,240 Speaker 2: about people not staring at the sun. What happens? Why 27 00:01:24,360 --> 00:01:26,720 Speaker 2: you why during an eclipse? 28 00:01:27,319 --> 00:01:30,640 Speaker 3: Well, George, the natural attraction of the event and many 29 00:01:30,680 --> 00:01:33,840 Speaker 3: people not being a enough themologist or an iurgeon, the 30 00:01:33,959 --> 00:01:37,319 Speaker 3: damage even momentarily by staring into the brilliance of the sun. 31 00:01:37,480 --> 00:01:40,600 Speaker 3: We don't normally do that. But the damage that could 32 00:01:40,600 --> 00:01:43,440 Speaker 3: occurage in that little sacred area in the back of 33 00:01:43,480 --> 00:01:47,600 Speaker 3: our retinas, caldophobia and even short durations of blasts of 34 00:01:47,680 --> 00:01:51,840 Speaker 3: the sun. People using telescopes, binoculars, and obviously if they 35 00:01:51,840 --> 00:01:54,880 Speaker 3: don't have the proper solar filters, this could, you know, 36 00:01:54,960 --> 00:01:58,040 Speaker 3: not to alarm people, cause us to have some serious 37 00:01:58,080 --> 00:02:01,640 Speaker 3: repercussions with our eyes. But we have stories to talk 38 00:02:01,680 --> 00:02:03,880 Speaker 3: about about this, George. We could go on and on, 39 00:02:04,600 --> 00:02:06,280 Speaker 3: but the safety of this thing. I want to make 40 00:02:06,320 --> 00:02:08,960 Speaker 3: sure that people understand there's not something to be feared. 41 00:02:09,480 --> 00:02:11,359 Speaker 3: A lot of people take this and say, I've even 42 00:02:11,400 --> 00:02:14,320 Speaker 3: read some articles in various news sources on the internet. 43 00:02:14,800 --> 00:02:17,520 Speaker 3: I don't always believe, of course, or to you, that 44 00:02:17,639 --> 00:02:20,680 Speaker 3: this is the darkest thing in America and it brings 45 00:02:20,720 --> 00:02:23,000 Speaker 3: on to them and gloom. I think just the opposite, 46 00:02:23,120 --> 00:02:25,360 Speaker 3: And I hope to provide some information in this whole 47 00:02:25,400 --> 00:02:28,000 Speaker 3: program to share with everybody the beauty of this. 48 00:02:28,160 --> 00:02:31,200 Speaker 2: Doctor Scott, what is the history of eclipse anyway? 49 00:02:31,680 --> 00:02:34,160 Speaker 3: Well, Georgia goes back some a long long time. I mean, 50 00:02:34,240 --> 00:02:36,880 Speaker 3: this is even more of an amazing comment. How in 51 00:02:36,919 --> 00:02:40,240 Speaker 3: the heck did the ancients come together to calculate the 52 00:02:40,360 --> 00:02:43,880 Speaker 3: dates of these so called sacred geometry of them? And 53 00:02:43,919 --> 00:02:46,000 Speaker 3: if people go over to Italy right now in the 54 00:02:46,120 --> 00:02:50,240 Speaker 3: Verona Museum, there's one article there. It's an artifact that 55 00:02:50,400 --> 00:02:53,240 Speaker 3: is so sacred and it's probably the highest viewed object 56 00:02:53,240 --> 00:02:56,000 Speaker 3: that they have. And what is it. It's an astrolayer. 57 00:02:56,440 --> 00:02:58,320 Speaker 3: And for those of us that don't know what this is, 58 00:02:58,800 --> 00:03:01,799 Speaker 3: it's like a precent of the early days which you 59 00:03:01,880 --> 00:03:04,320 Speaker 3: had like brass disc and it has all these wheels 60 00:03:05,040 --> 00:03:08,560 Speaker 3: and it had the ability to calculate eclipses of that's 61 00:03:08,560 --> 00:03:12,000 Speaker 3: something I can't answer I don't think anybody can answer accurately. 62 00:03:12,560 --> 00:03:14,560 Speaker 3: But the reality of this, George, is that it's such 63 00:03:14,600 --> 00:03:18,480 Speaker 3: an amazing device. Even still we wonder how the heck 64 00:03:18,520 --> 00:03:21,600 Speaker 3: did the ancients even come together with this? But there's 65 00:03:21,639 --> 00:03:24,480 Speaker 3: some positive of all this. If you look at that astrolabe, 66 00:03:25,000 --> 00:03:28,360 Speaker 3: there's actually embedded symbols from many of the Arab nations. 67 00:03:28,919 --> 00:03:32,600 Speaker 3: There's Christian symbols on there, and there's other nations that 68 00:03:32,680 --> 00:03:35,920 Speaker 3: have symbology on these discs. So the point I'm trying 69 00:03:35,920 --> 00:03:38,160 Speaker 3: to make here is in the world that we live 70 00:03:38,200 --> 00:03:41,000 Speaker 3: in today, which seems to be on the edge, there 71 00:03:41,080 --> 00:03:44,080 Speaker 3: was a time in science when apparently all these cultures 72 00:03:44,080 --> 00:03:48,000 Speaker 3: and religions seem to come together that nobody really understands, George, 73 00:03:48,080 --> 00:03:53,280 Speaker 3: how they became the one the predictors of these great events. Nowadays, 74 00:03:53,320 --> 00:03:56,640 Speaker 3: it's pretty simple to do the fact. Then that's the 75 00:03:56,680 --> 00:03:57,680 Speaker 3: great mystery. 76 00:03:57,400 --> 00:04:01,000 Speaker 2: Right Is there something mystical about clips to Stephen? 77 00:04:01,520 --> 00:04:04,000 Speaker 3: Absolutely, George. I mean, if we look back on the 78 00:04:04,040 --> 00:04:06,720 Speaker 3: other side of the equation, many people look at this, 79 00:04:06,840 --> 00:04:09,240 Speaker 3: and the ancients looked at this. Look take the Egyptians, 80 00:04:09,240 --> 00:04:12,760 Speaker 3: for example, they looked at the sun. Their god Fra 81 00:04:13,760 --> 00:04:17,040 Speaker 3: was being attacked by this god called apep or a pulpus, 82 00:04:17,560 --> 00:04:20,599 Speaker 3: which was a snake. So it was the opposite of Rob. 83 00:04:20,680 --> 00:04:23,080 Speaker 3: It was the anti sun god, the enemy of Rob. 84 00:04:23,839 --> 00:04:27,520 Speaker 3: And actually the story goes even deeper. That particular object 85 00:04:27,560 --> 00:04:30,320 Speaker 3: in the sky, the sun, so sacred to everybody and Rob. 86 00:04:30,400 --> 00:04:33,640 Speaker 3: Of course, we find out that one of the goddesses 87 00:04:33,680 --> 00:04:38,240 Speaker 3: in Egyptian mythology Basket, she was a cat, and what 88 00:04:38,400 --> 00:04:41,560 Speaker 3: she did she hunted down the snake and she destroyed 89 00:04:41,600 --> 00:04:43,760 Speaker 3: it so that it wouldn't continue to destroy the sun. 90 00:04:44,480 --> 00:04:46,880 Speaker 3: But their stories, George, that go on even back into 91 00:04:47,040 --> 00:04:51,440 Speaker 3: Chinese mythology and astrology. There were two astrologers to the 92 00:04:51,480 --> 00:04:54,560 Speaker 3: court of the emperors, and this goes back to dynasties 93 00:04:54,600 --> 00:04:58,360 Speaker 3: a long time ago, and apparently in not a comical way. 94 00:04:58,400 --> 00:05:00,560 Speaker 3: But the factual story that we read is that they 95 00:05:00,560 --> 00:05:04,520 Speaker 3: got drunk the night before a major eclipse. Have them. 96 00:05:05,160 --> 00:05:08,159 Speaker 3: Their job was to protect the you know, the rulers 97 00:05:08,160 --> 00:05:10,680 Speaker 3: of China at that time, the emperors of the long 98 00:05:10,720 --> 00:05:13,720 Speaker 3: ago dynasties, and they failed to do that, and they 99 00:05:13,760 --> 00:05:16,760 Speaker 3: gave their lives to that. But the interesting thing is 100 00:05:17,080 --> 00:05:21,040 Speaker 3: eclipses have always held human fascination. There's so many things 101 00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:24,719 Speaker 3: that people can experience during these eclipse both partial and total. 102 00:05:25,279 --> 00:05:27,720 Speaker 2: We're going to take calls with Stephen Tate's next hour 103 00:05:27,800 --> 00:05:30,360 Speaker 2: on Coast to Coast to talk about not only the eclipse, 104 00:05:30,400 --> 00:05:32,760 Speaker 2: but about things going on in space. You want to 105 00:05:32,800 --> 00:05:35,840 Speaker 2: talk to them about telescopes. You have some fun, bring 106 00:05:35,880 --> 00:05:39,000 Speaker 2: the kids around on this one, Stephen. In this particular 107 00:05:39,120 --> 00:05:41,839 Speaker 2: case with the eclipse, how long will it last? 108 00:05:42,560 --> 00:05:45,840 Speaker 3: Georgia? If you're in the path of totality, it begins 109 00:05:45,880 --> 00:05:48,920 Speaker 3: down in southern Mexico along the beach coast of montapam 110 00:05:49,760 --> 00:05:51,560 Speaker 3: just a little bit north of that. If we go 111 00:05:51,640 --> 00:05:55,000 Speaker 3: in deep into Mexico into the mountains, this eclipse will 112 00:05:55,040 --> 00:05:58,440 Speaker 3: last in totality the umbral shadows in four minutes and 113 00:05:58,480 --> 00:05:59,080 Speaker 3: twenty seven. 114 00:05:59,560 --> 00:06:00,200 Speaker 2: That's all. 115 00:06:00,440 --> 00:06:03,600 Speaker 3: Oh yeah. That whole event then moves forward. You have 116 00:06:03,680 --> 00:06:05,599 Speaker 3: to be within this one hundred and twenty some mile 117 00:06:05,680 --> 00:06:08,680 Speaker 3: wide path of umbroo. But then it moves across the 118 00:06:08,680 --> 00:06:10,480 Speaker 3: Great State of Texas, where we're going to be in 119 00:06:10,600 --> 00:06:13,560 Speaker 3: talk about a little later. And then it continues to 120 00:06:13,680 --> 00:06:16,680 Speaker 3: race at speeds starting at about eighteen hundred miles an hour. 121 00:06:16,920 --> 00:06:19,719 Speaker 3: That's the shadow of the moon, the umbro shadow. But 122 00:06:19,800 --> 00:06:22,479 Speaker 3: what happens. Then Georgia, it moves up into states farther 123 00:06:22,600 --> 00:06:25,080 Speaker 3: up into the deep part of the United States, so 124 00:06:25,279 --> 00:06:29,320 Speaker 3: areas north of Texas, a little bit of Oklahoma, Arkansas 125 00:06:29,400 --> 00:06:32,360 Speaker 3: gets a good eclipse. Then it continues to move into 126 00:06:32,400 --> 00:06:36,880 Speaker 3: areas just touching and gracing areas of state Kentucky, and 127 00:06:36,880 --> 00:06:40,279 Speaker 3: then southern Illinois gets to see this, and Georgia. If 128 00:06:40,320 --> 00:06:43,640 Speaker 3: you were in Marion or Carbondale, Illinois, back in twenty. 129 00:06:43,320 --> 00:06:46,760 Speaker 2: Seventeen, I was close. Remember I was Lewis. 130 00:06:46,680 --> 00:06:50,680 Speaker 3: Absolutely right there near Saint Louis. Well, if you were 131 00:06:50,680 --> 00:06:53,799 Speaker 3: standing in that shield, let's say in Carbondale or in Marion, 132 00:06:54,480 --> 00:06:56,320 Speaker 3: you would just come out of your house, look up 133 00:06:56,360 --> 00:06:59,480 Speaker 3: and say, wow, here's an eclipse of the Sun. Sotamily 134 00:07:00,080 --> 00:07:03,320 Speaker 3: they get the luck of seeing this again on April 135 00:07:03,360 --> 00:07:06,920 Speaker 3: the eighth. So here's the point the average time, George, 136 00:07:06,960 --> 00:07:09,320 Speaker 3: if you just stood there anywhere on the Earth, let's 137 00:07:09,320 --> 00:07:13,280 Speaker 3: say primarily in the northern southern hemisphere, the next frequency 138 00:07:13,280 --> 00:07:16,000 Speaker 3: of an eclipse that's total to occur right by where 139 00:07:16,000 --> 00:07:18,640 Speaker 3: you're standing, it's about three hundred and seventy five years, 140 00:07:19,280 --> 00:07:21,560 Speaker 3: So that's an amazing thing. And then the eclipse path 141 00:07:21,640 --> 00:07:26,360 Speaker 3: moves farther up, it continues. How about downtown Cleveland, and hey, 142 00:07:26,400 --> 00:07:30,320 Speaker 3: for baseball fans out there, fans of the then Cleveland Indians, 143 00:07:30,320 --> 00:07:33,560 Speaker 3: now the Cleveland Guardians. On April late, they're having their 144 00:07:33,600 --> 00:07:37,160 Speaker 3: opening day game against the White Socks, but they're opening 145 00:07:37,240 --> 00:07:39,800 Speaker 3: up the entire parking lot. George, can you imagine how 146 00:07:39,800 --> 00:07:42,400 Speaker 3: many people will be standing out there? Hopefully in good weather, 147 00:07:43,040 --> 00:07:44,840 Speaker 3: that will be a sports eclipse. 148 00:07:44,880 --> 00:07:48,080 Speaker 2: To remember how dark does against Stevens well. 149 00:07:48,040 --> 00:07:50,360 Speaker 3: Usually, George, these eclipses if you had a clear sky, 150 00:07:50,440 --> 00:07:53,760 Speaker 3: the misnomer is it's that the entire sky gets dark 151 00:07:53,920 --> 00:07:57,360 Speaker 3: like night. And having witnessed this myself many many times, 152 00:07:57,400 --> 00:08:01,400 Speaker 3: like yourself, what you would see just before totality is 153 00:08:01,440 --> 00:08:04,360 Speaker 3: of course a deep darkening of your environment. But the 154 00:08:04,400 --> 00:08:07,880 Speaker 3: most fascinating thing about total eclipses is as you're looking 155 00:08:07,880 --> 00:08:10,680 Speaker 3: with the solar glasses just before totality, when you can 156 00:08:10,720 --> 00:08:13,960 Speaker 3: take them off, you would notice this happening behind you, 157 00:08:14,760 --> 00:08:17,840 Speaker 3: this incredible wall of darkness, which is the shadow of 158 00:08:17,880 --> 00:08:22,920 Speaker 3: the moon racing into like an apocalyptic event. But then 159 00:08:23,360 --> 00:08:26,120 Speaker 3: the actual darkness about on a level, George, it's like 160 00:08:26,160 --> 00:08:29,080 Speaker 3: a deep twilight because you can actually see some goal 161 00:08:29,120 --> 00:08:31,920 Speaker 3: along the horizon, but the eyes should be up on 162 00:08:32,000 --> 00:08:36,319 Speaker 3: totality this most amazing and sacred event and sacred geometry. 163 00:08:36,880 --> 00:08:40,000 Speaker 3: Many have described the George as seeing the eye of God, 164 00:08:40,320 --> 00:08:43,840 Speaker 3: the darkest black you've ever seen, surrounded by the most 165 00:08:43,840 --> 00:08:48,720 Speaker 3: beautiful corona, that iridescent glow with maybe some red prominences 166 00:08:48,760 --> 00:08:49,640 Speaker 3: on the limit of the sung. 167 00:08:49,840 --> 00:08:52,719 Speaker 2: Now, if it's cloudy, Steven, you won't see the eclipse. 168 00:08:52,760 --> 00:08:54,440 Speaker 2: But it'll still get dark, won't it. 169 00:08:54,800 --> 00:08:57,320 Speaker 3: It sure will. And want to go back into my 170 00:08:57,440 --> 00:09:01,120 Speaker 3: timeline of these historical events. I'm old enough to remember 171 00:09:01,160 --> 00:09:04,679 Speaker 3: George my first eclipse in Perry, Florida. Lucky for me, 172 00:09:04,800 --> 00:09:07,520 Speaker 3: my parents decided to take me out of school and say, son, 173 00:09:08,120 --> 00:09:10,680 Speaker 3: we're going to Florida to steen eclipse. So we drove 174 00:09:10,880 --> 00:09:14,400 Speaker 3: and we drove, and we were in a field in Perry, Florida, 175 00:09:14,440 --> 00:09:17,760 Speaker 3: and Georgia was raining cats and dogs. It got dark 176 00:09:17,800 --> 00:09:22,000 Speaker 3: and ominous. But it's actually this eclipse is actually from 177 00:09:22,040 --> 00:09:24,920 Speaker 3: the same Saros cycle, which is a repetitive series of 178 00:09:24,920 --> 00:09:29,240 Speaker 3: eclipses that happened on an eighteen plus year cycle. So 179 00:09:29,280 --> 00:09:32,560 Speaker 3: the one on April A is another of the eclipses 180 00:09:32,559 --> 00:09:35,840 Speaker 3: from what we call Saro's number one point thirty nine amazing. 181 00:09:36,600 --> 00:09:39,120 Speaker 2: Is there something very spiritual about an eclipse? 182 00:09:39,160 --> 00:09:42,280 Speaker 3: Stephen Well, absolutely, George, I go to that deep side 183 00:09:42,280 --> 00:09:45,000 Speaker 3: of my own belief you think about it and breathe 184 00:09:45,040 --> 00:09:48,120 Speaker 3: in this moment of magic, because not only does it 185 00:09:48,200 --> 00:09:50,440 Speaker 3: not happen often, as we've been talking about here, and 186 00:09:50,679 --> 00:09:54,199 Speaker 3: obviously those are experience didn't know that, but there's something, 187 00:09:54,280 --> 00:09:57,600 Speaker 3: George about the environment. And if people stand out there 188 00:09:57,640 --> 00:10:00,280 Speaker 3: in the field or wherever they're looking in totality in 189 00:10:00,320 --> 00:10:03,320 Speaker 3: a clear sky, you get to see the interaction of 190 00:10:03,360 --> 00:10:08,040 Speaker 3: how animals and other weather events happen, because in previous 191 00:10:08,080 --> 00:10:10,640 Speaker 3: totally closes. George, I've been standing out in the field 192 00:10:11,480 --> 00:10:14,200 Speaker 3: like many people, and the temperature drop right around the 193 00:10:14,200 --> 00:10:16,880 Speaker 3: time of totality can be ten to fifteen degrees of 194 00:10:16,920 --> 00:10:19,960 Speaker 3: a temperature drop. And then we find that animals like 195 00:10:20,040 --> 00:10:22,720 Speaker 3: horses and cattle, they may want to go back to 196 00:10:22,760 --> 00:10:25,760 Speaker 3: the barn, or insects come out of the ground, birds 197 00:10:25,800 --> 00:10:28,960 Speaker 3: will look for their ventual whip area to go cover 198 00:10:29,040 --> 00:10:31,960 Speaker 3: for night. But it's just amazing to me, it's like 199 00:10:32,480 --> 00:10:35,480 Speaker 3: one of the most amazing experiences, and to so many 200 00:10:35,520 --> 00:10:39,199 Speaker 3: people it's even more than that. Beyond the spiritual event, 201 00:10:39,360 --> 00:10:40,280 Speaker 3: whatever that could. 202 00:10:40,120 --> 00:10:44,280 Speaker 2: Be, Stephen. In terms of visuals, the size of the 203 00:10:44,320 --> 00:10:47,880 Speaker 2: Moon in the Sun are not actually the same size. 204 00:10:47,960 --> 00:10:49,480 Speaker 2: But they look the same, don't they. 205 00:10:49,559 --> 00:10:53,760 Speaker 3: Absolutely Well, George, here's an interesting comparison. The Sun, as 206 00:10:53,760 --> 00:10:56,079 Speaker 3: we know it is eight hundred and sixty five thousand 207 00:10:56,080 --> 00:10:59,320 Speaker 3: miles across. What does that mean in relativistic terms? It 208 00:10:59,320 --> 00:11:01,319 Speaker 3: means that you could take one hundred and nine Earth 209 00:11:01,440 --> 00:11:04,040 Speaker 3: and got it across the Sun. That's how many earths. 210 00:11:04,120 --> 00:11:05,079 Speaker 2: That's a big sun. 211 00:11:05,200 --> 00:11:08,800 Speaker 3: That's the massive fusion ball. But the moon simply is 212 00:11:08,840 --> 00:11:12,080 Speaker 3: only two one hundred and fifty nine miles from And 213 00:11:12,120 --> 00:11:14,840 Speaker 3: when you see that beautiful full moon, you look at 214 00:11:14,840 --> 00:11:17,680 Speaker 3: the right edge, let's say that's New York City. The 215 00:11:17,720 --> 00:11:21,040 Speaker 3: opposite edge would be Phoenix, Arizona, where I'm broadcasting from. 216 00:11:21,520 --> 00:11:23,840 Speaker 3: So that distance is two thousand, one hundred and fifty 217 00:11:23,920 --> 00:11:27,800 Speaker 3: nine miles. But the geometry, we call it sacred geometry. 218 00:11:27,840 --> 00:11:31,240 Speaker 3: For this reason, the Sun is just an amazing ball 219 00:11:31,320 --> 00:11:34,720 Speaker 3: of energy, the fusion ball. But George, if the Moon 220 00:11:34,760 --> 00:11:38,240 Speaker 3: were only six hundred and ninety three miles smaller, we 221 00:11:38,280 --> 00:11:42,200 Speaker 3: would never have total eclipses or eclipses like this. So 222 00:11:42,360 --> 00:11:46,720 Speaker 3: lucky for us. Even though the Moon is removing itself slowly, 223 00:11:46,800 --> 00:11:51,320 Speaker 3: maybe an inch or two every year, in its gravitational changes, 224 00:11:52,040 --> 00:11:55,120 Speaker 3: we find out That's why I call it another's sacred geometry, 225 00:11:55,200 --> 00:11:58,640 Speaker 3: because where else in the Solar system do you see 226 00:11:58,640 --> 00:12:02,280 Speaker 3: this kind of eclipse event. And we could go into 227 00:12:02,320 --> 00:12:05,400 Speaker 3: greater detail on this, but I think it's important just 228 00:12:05,440 --> 00:12:07,800 Speaker 3: to know that the beauty of this eclipse is number one. 229 00:12:08,559 --> 00:12:10,560 Speaker 3: The physics of it or the science of it, is 230 00:12:10,600 --> 00:12:13,280 Speaker 3: also great, but yours. There's going to be so many 231 00:12:13,360 --> 00:12:16,320 Speaker 3: people that are tracking all the way into the deep 232 00:12:16,360 --> 00:12:20,360 Speaker 3: part of totality that some areas and communities have already 233 00:12:20,480 --> 00:12:24,959 Speaker 3: given a very mild disaster alert. This is kind of amazing, 234 00:12:25,000 --> 00:12:25,600 Speaker 3: don't you think. 235 00:12:26,040 --> 00:12:29,280 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 236 00:12:29,320 --> 00:12:32,560 Speaker 1: one am Eastern and go to Coast to coastam dot 237 00:12:32,600 --> 00:12:33,400 Speaker 1: com for more