Science is looking up

Try 8pm. Plenty high enough if the horizon is 10+ miles away
Thanks for the tips.

Just got back from one of the local little
League fields where the lights were all out.

Used my dads (really old) binoculars. Took me about 3 minutes to scan the horizon and I could clearly see it and the tail. Kinda off left of center a bit.

It wasn’t clear like some of the pics I’ve seen online but that’s probably because my vision sucks at night especially.

Northern lights were much more fun/cool but at least between the eclipse, northern lights and this I saw all 3.
 
At Raritan Community college, it was run by https://gscrl.org/#one. This is the first for the season, next at Bridgewater mall. Was fun watching the guy who was driving a cyber truck battle an 8 yo girl in the semis. Talked to the girl's dad and she's designing her own bot next time instead of using a kit

pretty cool, will have to keep this in mind as something to do with my daughter when she gets a little older.
 
This was really good if accept that nothing can go faster then the speed of light in any reference frame.

 
SpaceX looking to not explode today.
5:50pm

Scrubbed. C u tomorrow
 
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Intuitive Machines-2 Lunar Landing (Official NASA Broadcast) - YouTube

Watch Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C lunar lander, Athena, touch down on the Moon.

Athena will land at Mons Mouton, a lunar plateau near the Moon’s South Pole, delivering NASA science and technology to the Moon’s surface. Landing is slated for no earlier than 12:30 p.m. EST (1730 UTC).

The NASA tech aboard the lander will demonstrate resource utilization on the Moon by measuring the possible presence of volatiles or gases from lunar soil and give future spacecraft a permanent reference point on the lunar surface. This is Intuitive Machines’ second Moon landing as part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative. To learn more about CLPS, visit https://go.nasa.gov/3RFR0A5.
 
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