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OK, not hearing Ruben. I'm going to go back to some content here, and we can go back after some more callers in a while, talk about the green comets that we've got going on there. Those of you that are paying attention, you see the comets are back in the news this month. We've got not just one, but two kind of putting on a subtle display. The brightest of those two is comet C2025A6 Lemon, already visible through binoculars under dark skies. It's developing a faint, glowing green halo. The background on the green, for those of you who may or may not know the color, comes from diatomic carbon. So it's C2, which emits a green light as it's being observed here, excited by the sun. So that's kind of an interesting thing to me. I'm a carbon and graphite scientist. It was my day job. But it kind of reminded me when I read that about, some of you will recall when the Buckminster-Foolery and Carbon 60 was discovered. It was first kind of observed in dust clouds in space, using spectroscopy to kind of pin down that that potentially exists. And I gather by the time they modeled the IR spectra of the stuff, that kind of suggested it could have been a caged carbon structure. Kind of neat. But that was another time, right? But these comets, though, that's happening presently. The other one, that was the comet C2025R2 Swan. It's trailing close behind. It's expected to peak around October 20. Both are best seen before dawn, low in the east, near the constellation of Leo as the month goes on. And then again, both of those are glowing green, and it's due to that diatomic carbon molecule. OK. We'll pause here and come back. JBK standing by.
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