Did you rush outside at 10:21 a.m. to see what you could of the solar eclipse? Well, thousands of eager eclipse viewers from around the world headed to the path of totality in Oregon, where the moon completely blocked out the sun.
NASA captured a live stream of the eclipse:
And thousands of others took photos, videos and shared them with the world:
Totality 🌑
— Nitish Kumar Meena (@nitishq)
It's starting in DC!!
— Richard Barnhill (@wolfpackwx)
iPhone and eclipse smart binoculars. Fun in the driveway sun!
— Mary E McGlynn (@MaryEMcGlynn)
Can you spot the from our visible satellite loop? Follow the shadow!
— ECCC Weather BC (@ECCCWeatherBC)
As the prophesy foretold! The Millennials have killed many things, but we have finally killed sunlight.
— Busted Jetpack (@bustedjetpack)
Watch transit the Sun as captured by a high-speed camera at 1,500 frames per second!
— NASA HQ PHOTO (@nasahqphoto)
Less than two centuries after the invention of photography, a tiny device in my pocket can capture this. Viva science.
— Maria Popova (@brainpicker)
: watch the total solar eclipse from Oregon.
— CanadianSpaceAgency (@csa_asc)
Some though, were a little disappointed:
Meanwhile, in Chicago...
— Chicago Wolves (@Chicago_Wolves)