Delta eclipse flight: Here's what it was like
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 13:20
At 35,000 feet over the U.S. the air was thick with anticipation and excited chatter as everyone pulled out their phones hoping to get a photo.
Gray shadows entered the blue sky, turning it a rich slate as the moon started to eclipse the sun.
The moment everyone had been waiting for was here—totality.
Before even getting into the air Delta Air Lines treated passengers to an experience. As they arrived at gate E15 at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport for Flight 1010 to Detroit, they were met with a celestial-themed balloon arch, a red carpet and music.
Flight attendants in purple and gray passed out eclipse-viewing glasses the airline produced in collaboration with Warby Parker—paper shades but with blue-and-white star path drawings on the front and "Eyes on the Sky" written inside.
Delta workers wore T-shirts emblazoned with "Climbing the Cosmos," the airline's slogan for the pair of flights from Austin and Dallas that would be in the path of the eclipse 35,000 feet in the air.
People were excited, and the gate party only heightened the anticipation. Most passengers flew to Dallas that morning or the night before just to turn right around, all to experience totality in a way few others could.
Moon's early volcanic activity reshaped by internal movements
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
Joint mission by Astrobotic and Mission Control showcases lunar rover tech aboard Griffin-1
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
Zenno Astronautics collaborates with Faraday Factory Japan on space-bound superconducting magnets
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
UK Space Agency allocates 13 million pounds to international space projects
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
MDA Space Defines The Next Generation Of Robotics With New MDA Skymaker Product Line
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
Private space company, Taobao team up to test rocket-powered deliveries
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
Climate warming endangers Antarctic meteorite collection
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
China, Thailand to cooperate in lunar exploration missions
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
'Spectacular' total eclipse leaves North Americans spellbound
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
Axient establishes subsidiary in the Netherlands to enhance European aerospace and defense presence
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
SpaceBilt and Phison Skyrocket to International Space Station in 2025
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
HawkEye 360 prepares dual satellite clusters for spring SpaceX launch
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
OpenAI's Sam Altman declared billionaire by Forbes
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:50
Proba-2 sees the Moon eclipse the Sun
Tuesday, 09 April 2024 11:30
ESA’s Proba-2 captured two partial solar eclipses on 8 April 2024.
A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, totally or partially blocking the Sun from Earth’s point of view. On 8 April, lucky viewers across North America witnessed the Moon blocking out the Sun in its entirety for a few minutes, while those north and south of the ‘total eclipse path’ witnessed a partial eclipse.
Throughout the eclipse period, the Moon crossed Proba-2’s field of view twice, appearing as a partial solar eclipse. The satellite flies around 700 km above Earth’s