Posted on 03/01/2017 10:24:23 AM PST by Red Badger
On Aug. 21, 2017, American skywatchers will be treated to a rare and spectacular celestial show the first total solar eclipse visible from the continental United States in nearly four decades.
Next year's "Great American Total Solar Eclipse" will darken skies all the way from Oregon to South Carolina, along a stretch of land about 70 miles (113 kilometers) wide. People who descend upon this "path of totality" for the big event are in for an unforgettable experience, said eclipse expert Jay Pasachoff, an astronomer at Williams College in Massachusetts.
"It's a tremendous opportunity," Pasachoff told Space.com. "It's a chance to see the universe change around you." [Solar Eclipses: An Observer's Guide (Infographic)]
A total solar eclipse last darkened soil on the U.S. mainland on Feb. 26, 1979. But August 2017 will mark the first time in 99 years that such an event is "readily available to people from coast to coast," Pasachoff said.
A rare event
The fact that total solar eclipses occur at all is a quirk of cosmic geometry. The moon orbits an average of 239,000 miles (384,600 kilometers) from Earth just the right distance to seem the same size in the sky as the much-larger sun.
But most solar eclipses are of the partial variety, in which the moon appears to take a bite out of the sun's disk. Indeed, two to five solar eclipses occur every year on average; total eclipses happen just once every 18 months or so. (Eclipses are relatively rare because the moon's orbit is inclined about 5 degrees relative to that of Earth. If the two bodies orbited in exactly the same plane, a solar eclipse would occur every month, during the moon's "new" phase.)
Furthermore, the narrow path of totality is often inaccessible to skywatchers most of Earth is covered by water, after all so a total solar eclipse that occurs over populated areas is quite special. Indeed, the August 2017 event will be the first one whose totality path lies completely within the United States since 1776, experts have said.
That path goes from the Oregon coast through Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. While just 12 million people or so live within the narrow band, perhaps 220 million reside within a day's drive of it, according to Space.com skywatching columnist Joe Rao. [Incredible Solar Eclipse View Shot During Alaska Airlines Flight (Video)]
Pasachoff advises folks to make that drive when the time comes.
"Though the rest of the continental U.S. will have at least a 55 percent partial eclipse, it wont ever get dark there, and eye-protection filters would have to be used at all times even to know that the eclipse is happening. The dramatic effects occur only for those in the path of totality," Pasachoff said in a statement.
"If you are in that path of totality, you are seeing the main event, but if you are off to the side even where the sun is 99 percent covered by the moon it is like going up to the ticket booth of a baseball or football stadium but not going inside," he added.
Pasachoff himself plans to be there. He has observed 63 solar eclipses to date, and not just for fun: The events provide a rare opportunity to study the sun's wispy outer atmosphere, which is called the corona. (The sun's overwhelming brightness usually drowns out the faint corona.)
Temperatures in the corona top 1.8 million degrees Fahrenheit (1 million degrees Celsius), making the region much hotter than the solar surface, which is just 11,000 degrees F (6,000 degrees C) or so. How the corona gets so hot has puzzled scientists for decades, and Pasachoff and his colleagues aim to gather some useful data during the Great American Eclipse.
"How energy is injected into the corona is one of the things we'll be investigating," Pasachoff told Space.com.
Be safe!
If you do plan to observe the August 2017 eclipse, remember: NEVER look directly at the sun without proper eye protection, except when the solar disk is completely occluded (during the brief period of totality); serious and permanent eye damage can result.
"Proper eye protection" includes specially made solar filters, eclipse glasses or No. 14 welder's glass. You can also observe the eclipse indirectly, by making a pinhole camera or watching shadows cast by trees. (The gaps between leaves act as natural pinholes.)
To learn more about how to safely observe the sun, check out this Space.com infographic.
Finally, if you miss out on the August 2017 event, don't despair you'll get another chance seven years later. In 2024, a total solar eclipse will darken the skies above Mexico and Texas, up through the Midwest and northeastern U.S.
[SNIP]
Editor's note: If you take an amazing photo of the 2017 solar eclipse or any other celestial sight you'd like to share with us and our news partners for a possible story or image gallery, send images and comments in to managing editor Tariq Malik at spacephotos@space.com.
Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com. Editor's Recommendations
I’m in South Central Kentucky. I quick drive to the area around Bowling Green will work.
ok now we know the day of the Lord’s Return, anyone know what hour the eclipse will happen?
Bookmarked..coming right thru our neighborhood! And when it won’t likely be cloudy!
Bookmarked..coming right thru our neighborhood! And when it won’t likely be cloudy!
Yes, anywhere within 30 miles of the ocean or Gulf of Mexico can have pop-up thunderstorms in the afternoon..............
Looks like the path is going right over Columbia, South Carolina. Perhaps this calls for a road trip.
I remember reading about this when I moved to Asheville, NC in 2009 and thinking wow that’s a long way off, yet here we are...
Will be making the drive to Greenville
Depends on where you are in the path.
The map directed from this page will tell you to the second: http://www.eclipse2017.org/2017/path_through_the_US.htm
Back in the ‘60’s had a solar eclipse that was to be prime in East Tennessee...Scientists and meteorologists came from all over the country and set up to view around Knoxville....About two hours before it was to happen, it clouded up and we had one h*ll of a rainstorm...
They were all scrambling to get all their stuff moved...It was hilarious...
GSMNP will have a special viewing @ clingmans dome. Area will be closed. Buses running from Gatlinburg and Cherokee if interested.
Same here. Eastern Kansas! I’m spending the day at a wildlife refuge near Atchison though. That’s ground zero - totally total! Can’t wait. I alreasy have the day off
Of course some of us know that it’s not *really* a spheroid moon passing
in front of a spheroid sun as we observe it from our spheroid Earth.
Its just one of the elephants on the turtle’s back taking a short break.
I was going to go to Oregon to watch it but the only place where motels and hotels are available around the coast where you are not guaranteed a clear day, actually very likely have clouds.
I’m close enough I may just drive down for the day watch it and drive back in Central Oregon
Clouds don’t prevent darkness.
Kool. I was in Palm Springs, CA in the 90’s when there was a total eclipse. We were at the community/condo pool and it started getting “dark”. A neighbor had no idea what was happening, so we told her. It dropped 20 degrees during it. Probably from 108 to 88.... It was a once in a lifetime thing to see.
I feel so blessed...am moving to Paducah Kentucky in a month or two and guess what...yup...right in the path!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.