New York’s most “wholesome” club is 82-year-old Joe Delfausse’s telescope on 9th Street and 8th Avenue in Park Slope.

A line of people formed along the painted meridian on 9th Street between a bike lane and the road on Wednesday with Saturn’s rings and a super blue moon lighting up the sky. That’s where Delfausse, an astronomy enthusiast from Brooklyn, set up his telescope.

It had been a cloudy day, but the sky cleared just in time for nightfall.

“Holy cow!” Delfausse said, counting the number of people waiting in line to take a peak. “Twenty-seven, 28, 29, 30, 31, that’s amazing.”

He quickly made his way back to the telescope to adjust it, as he does every few minutes when he’s out showing people astronomical wonders – something he’s been doing for 20 years. At a time when the city is facing various uncertainties, Delfausse was out providing a space for neighbors to come together and appreciate natural wonders.

“Everybody likes to connect with someone — we like to talk to people and share. Right? And so this is my way of connecting and to make a difference in somebody’s life,” Delfausse said. “When they look through the scope and they say, ‘Oh my God, I’ve never seen anything like this. You’ve changed my life forever,’ — people have actually said that — it’s a really good feeling.”

It’s been a busy week for the astronomy buff. Delfausse has been managing a longer viewing line since a video of his telescope spectacle went viral on TikTok last week. In that video, he’s seen nodding at someone to step up to take a look, both hands in his pockets, standing casually in the middle of the street where the telescope is set up.

READ  삼각주의 상승은 만족스러운 사람들의 광범위한 확산을 촉진하고 있습니다.

“The cars just had to deal with it,” the caption of the video posted by musician Daphne Juliet read.

[–>

People line the street in anticipation of their turn to look through the telescope.

Catalina Gonella

That night, Delfausse had been searching for Saturn for a while when he finally found it by setting up in the middle of 9th Street. At the same time, a concert at Prospect Park had just let out.

“I was in the middle of the street, and they would say, ‘What are you looking at?’ I said, ‘Come over here, look in the scope and you’ll know right away what it is,’” Delfausse said, recounting the night. “And so immediately the line got — 30 people on line, like within five minutes. And it stayed that way for like an hour-and-a-half. It was wonderful.”

On Wednesday, Delfausse managed to find Saturn without blocking traffic on the southwest corner of the intersection. The planet’s placement coinciding with a supermoon meant that Delfausse was constantly pointing the telescope back and forth between the two for his visitors. But he didn’t mind.

“Look at all the people they’re talking with. These are total strangers and they’re all talking with one another. That’s what this is all about,” he said.

It was 28-year-old Park Slope resident Josh Harrison’s first time looking through a telescope, and it left him stunned. But it was the communal experience, he said, that warmed his heart.

“It’s a really amazing way to see the community — I think to see your neighborhood, to see people from other neighborhoods coming together and there’s this really beautiful public service aspect of it,” Harrison said. “It’s really, it’s very wholesome.”

READ  거대한 긴다리 화석 펭귄의 새로운 종의 식별 | 고생물학

[–>

Joe Delfausse adjusts the telescope for his visitors to account for planetary rotation.

Catalina Gonella

And while the line was a vibe of its own, for neighbors waiting their turn, nothing beat looking through the telescope. People gasped in awe. One person called Saturn “cute.”

Afterwards, each person thanked Delfausse and gushed about having seen the moon’s craters and Saturn’s rings — some standing in line twice to get a good look at each one.

Mary Jane Callister, 55, stopped by the intersection with her two teenage kids Henry and Frances Helquist.

“We were able to see its rings, which I’ve never seen before,” Callister said. “And then of course, the moon, which is what we came out to see, was beautiful. We could see some of the craters on it and really see the gray color of it.”

It was a special occasion for Frances, whose favorite planet is Saturn.

“When I was a little kid, I just liked the planet. I just thought it was cool. It’s so weird looking!” the teenager said. “All the other planets just kind of are round circles and then Saturn just has a ring of just trash, like space trash, and so it’s kind of cool.”

Finally, a little after 10 p.m., Delfausse got some relief. A fellow friend with a telescope pulled up to the intersection and set up shop, splitting moon and planet viewing duties. That’s what Delfausse said he wants to see more of.

“What I did was nothing special. Anybody could do this,” Delfausse said. “I used to be the membership secretary of the Amateur Astronomers Association and we had 850 members, 47% of them had telescopes. Where are all those people? Why aren’t they out on the street corner doing what we’re doing?” he said.

READ  SpaceX 로켓은 세계 최초의 민간인 승무원을 궤도로 수송 | 우주

He continued, “I’d like to get everybody who has a telescope out here doing this on every street corner in New York City.”

답글 남기기

이메일 주소는 공개되지 않습니다. 필수 필드는 *로 표시됩니다

You May Also Like

남극 대륙의 '지구 종말 빙하'는 20세기 중반부터 녹기 시작했습니다: 연구

월요일에 발표된 연구에 따르면 서남극의 스웨이츠 빙하(가설 붕괴로 인해 잠재적으로 재앙적 결과를…

NASA 안전 고문은 Boeing의 Starliner와 SpaceX의 Starship에 대한 우려를 표명했습니다.

보잉의 스타라이너 우주선은 2019년 12월 22일 Orbital Flight Test-1 임무가 끝날 때…

물리학자들은 이전에는 불가능하다고 생각했던 온도에서 초전도체의 거동을 발견했습니다.

과학자들은 다음과 같은 기본 프로세스를 발견했습니다. 초전도성 이는 이전에 생각했던 것보다 더…

‘외계인’ 딱정벌레의 잃어버린 날개는 진화의 퍼즐을 제기합니다.

스웨덴 룬드 대학의 어린 표본 수집품에 있는 곤충은 어울리지 않는 모습을 보였습니다.…