Posted on 04/08/2024 12:09:29 PM PDT by nickcarraway
en Turner published 1 hour ago
Today's total solar eclipse won't produce any especially harmful radiation, but that doesn't mean you should look at it with your bare eyes.
Today (April 8), a total solar eclipse will sweep across 15 U.S. states, plunging a 115-mile-wide (185 kilometers), 10,000-mile-long (16,000 km) path into sudden darkness as the moon's enormous shadow glides across the face of the sun.
It's a cosmic coin trick that has always evoked feelings of both awe and dread in skywatchers down on Earth, and eclipses have been interpreted throughout history as messages from gods, bad omens or heralds of imminent apocalypses.
In the present, scientists know a lot more about eclipses (and are even chasing today's eclipse down in jet planes) but that doesn't mean that all of humanity's fears around the celestial events have been assuaged.
Thankfully, many of these myths have already been debunked by NASA, including one popular claim that total solar eclipses produce especially harmful rays that can cause blindness.
"During a total solar eclipse when the disk of the moon fully covers the sun, the brilliant corona emits only electromagnetic radiation, though sometimes with a greenish hue," NASA wrote in a blog post for the 2017 Great American Eclipse. The sun's corona — its hot, outer atmosphere — peeks out from around the moon during a total eclipse and will look spiky, like a hedgehog, due to this radiation.
(Excerpt) Read more at livescience.com ...
The moon interposes between the Earth and the sun along distinct totality of darkness path. This article has a glaring incorrect statement about the moon’s shadow gliding across the sun. The shadow is the complete blockage of sunlight to a specific location on Earth— a shadow that glides across the Earth NOT the sun. Statement made no sense.
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