Have a look at how twitterati reacted to the solar eclipse 2017
Millions of people were dazzled by the spectacular solar eclipse yesterday, which was the first eclipse in 100 years to be seen from both the east and the west coast. The eclipse drew vast crowds of people. And the last time an eclipse was seen from both the Atlantic and the Pacific coast was in 1918.
The last time the USA witnessed any solar eclipse was in 1979.
A lot of people, including celebrities, tweeted about the eclipse.
Let’s have a look at how people reacted on Twitter:
The #solareclipse is upon us. I hope this day reminds us that we share a common origin in the stars & that we're citizens of the same planet pic.twitter.com/IBp1fSmoNS
— Bill Nye (@BillNye) August 21, 2017
This is what shadows look like during a partial eclipse. These are the shadows of individual leaves from a nearby tree last #SolarEclipse pic.twitter.com/iLS6UhdpZd
— abdul (@Advil) August 21, 2017
"Well played, moon." Netflix admits defeat after losing viewers during the solar eclipse https://t.co/EDDCe0j18C
— TIME (@TIME) August 22, 2017
Wow, someone caught the solar eclipse mid flight, just beautiful! #SolarEclipse2017 pic.twitter.com/71swKNiawF
— Shaded – RT Pinned (@Shqded) August 22, 2017
Best photos from Monday's solar eclipse: https://t.co/r70wApCR8o
The next total solar eclipse visible from US to take place April 8, 2024. pic.twitter.com/uOkg97RPYE
— ABC News (@ABC) August 22, 2017
https://twitter.com/lucascasanho/status/899846662549639169
https://twitter.com/WorldAndScience/status/899858692891430912
Video shows the International Space Station transiting in front of the sun during the total solar eclipse. https://t.co/F9N3lNSeAi pic.twitter.com/MXsqGblbS4
— ABC News (@ABC) August 22, 2017
Someone shouts "don't look" as Pres. Trump looks up without eclipse glasses on as solar eclipse passes over D.C. https://t.co/rJC0R7jw4H pic.twitter.com/LaGX8IlMGF
— ABC News (@ABC) August 22, 2017
NASA's Best Photos of the Total Solar Eclipse of 2017 https://t.co/SacburVCLy pic.twitter.com/zVIN9CEeEw
— SPACE.com (@SPACEdotcom) August 22, 2017