{
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    "results": [
        {
            "id": 5604,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5604/",
            "result_type": "Visualization",
            "release_date": "2026-01-27T18:00:00-05:00",
            "title": "March 3, 2026 Total Lunar Eclipse: Shadow View",
            "description": "On March 3, 2026, the Moon enters the Earth's shadow, creating a total lunar eclipse. This set of visualizations shows the view down the barrel of the Earth's shadow as the Moon moves through it, along with times at various stages.",
            "hits": 1184
        },
        {
            "id": 5524,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/5524/",
            "result_type": "Interactive",
            "release_date": "2025-05-22T08:00:59-04:00",
            "title": "\"Snap It!\" Solar Eclipse Photography Game",
            "description": "The Traveler needs your help! They have come to Earth to study an event we call a total solar eclipse. Can you help the Traveler snap photos of an eclipse?",
            "hits": 165
        },
        {
            "id": 12693,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12693/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2017-08-17T11:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "A Total Solar Eclipse Revealed Solar Storms 100 Years Before Satellites",
            "description": "Eclipses set the stage for historic science. NASA is taking advantage of the Aug. 21, 2017 eclipse by funding 11 ground-based scientific studies. As our scientists prepare their experiments for next week, we're looking back to an historic 1860 total solar eclipse, which many think gave humanity our first glimpse of solar storms — called coronal mass ejections — 100 years before scientists first understood what they were.Scientists observed these eruptions in the 1970s during the beginning of the modern satellite era, when satellites in space were able to capture thousands of images of solar activity that had never been seen before. But in hindsight, scientists realized their satellite images might not be the first record of these solar storms. Hand-drawn records of an 1860 total solar eclipse bore surprising resemblance to these groundbreaking satellite images.Eclipse archive imagery from: http://mlso.hao.ucar.edu/hao-eclipse-archive.php || ",
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