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Ofa Solar Eclipse Guide April 2024
Ofa Solar Eclipse Guide April 2024
Ofa Solar Eclipse Guide April 2024
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almanac.com/total-solar-eclipse-2024-path-totality-across-americas
The April 8, 2024 Total Solar Eclipse will be a stunningly long eclipse with over 32 million people living on the path of
totality. It will be the most-watched celestial event in our lifetime. Get all the details about when, where, and what to
expect in Bob Berman’s total solar eclipse guide.
Miss the 2024 total solar eclipse; your next chance in the U.S. won’t happen until August 12, 2045. Learn how often
solar eclipses occur.
During a TOTAL solar eclipse, the Moon completely blocks the Sun while it passes perfectly between the Earth and the
Sun. A shadow is cast onto Earth, and the sky turns nearly as dark as night.
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The sun’s corona gleams a total solar eclipse in 2012 as viewed in Australia. (Credit: Romeo Durscher via NASA)
To me, the experience tops the list of nature’s most incredible spectacles. Most people are awed by a brilliant comet,
which happens every 15 to 20 years on average. And also by a bright display of the Northern Lights. One might include
the rare bolide or exploding meteor. But the very best of them all—number one—is a total eclipse of the Sun.
Yes, the total eclipse tops them all. Watching deep pink geysers of nuclear fire shoot from the Sun’s edge, you feel
nature’s absolute climax has been attained. It’s not only an otherworldly experience, but also an incredible cosmic
coincidence. How else do we explain that the Moon is 400 times smaller than the Sun but also 400 times nearer to us?
This makes the only two disks in our sky appear the same size! It would not be the case if either were larger, smaller,
nearer, or farther away.
I’ve run astronomy tours for years, and half of the clients I’ve taken to see total solar eclipses have wept. Real tears.
From the sheer emotional impact of what their eyes were beholding. Will a lunar eclipse make you weep? Will a peek at
Mars through a telescope? No, they won’t. This experience manages to touch your very core. “The home of my soul!” is
how Rita Marinelli described the solar eclipse she viewed with our group on February 16, 1980, from northeastern India.
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Click to see map details. Credit: NASA
Not only do 32 million people live on the 2024 path of totality in the United States (versus 12 million people in 2017) but
also tens of millions of people in North America live near the path of totality. This should be the most watched total
solar eclipse in history, which is very exciting for all the school children and science geeks like myself.
The path crosses through Dallas, Little Rock, Indianapolis, Cleveland, and Buffalo—with San Antonio, Austin, Cincinnati,
and the Canadian city of Montreal lying just at the edge of the 120-mile-wide eclipse path.
You’ll observe the glories of totality if you were in Cleveland or Burlington, Vermont, but not if you are in, say, Albany,
New York. So, traveling into the path of totality is the most important thing you can do.
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Map to See Eclipse 2024 Path
Click here to zoom into the Google map to see a local area. Use your two fingers to adjust the map.
If you read the fine print and realize that it will only be a “90% eclipse” in your hometown, a partial eclipse, you might
decide that that’s good enough. After all, the fractions 90% or 95% may seem close enough to 100% to seem a
negligible difference, not enough to justify all that travel. Right?
Wrong! Though many imagine that the main draw of a total eclipse is to experience darkness during the day, the actual
wonders are a series of rare, even bizarre phenomena that materialize at no other time. A partial eclipse, even if the Sun
is 99% blocked, misses the event’s heart and soul because the most amazing stuff happens solely at totality.
People along the path of totality will see the Sun’s corona, or outer atmospheric glow, which is usually not visible due to
the brightness of the Sun. The corona forms delicate magnetic lines that leap across the sky. And they will see the pitch
black New Moon as it visibly moves in its orbit to intrude upon the Sun! And then there are the prominences—those
astounding pink tongues of flame—as they fly up from the Sun’s edge! It’s like nothing else.
If you’re outside the path, you will merely see a partial eclipse, which will simultaneously be seen from a much huger
region. A partial solar eclipse is a common event and barely 1% as spectacular as a total solar eclipse. Solar eclipses
are different. That’s because an avalanche of unique effects suddenly unfolds in totality. With a partial eclipse, nothing
appears, because you then can’t look at the Sun at all without damaging your eyes. Instead, you’re looking through black
eclipse glasses, seeing the Sun partially blocked out so that it looks like a crescent Moon. This goes on for a full hour
and is the only thing that occurs if you’re not in the total eclipse path. See definitions of a partial versus total eclipse.
But is the partial eclipse interesting, at least? Well, sort of. You can personally answer this because you’ve probably
already seen one or more, since partial solar eclipses happen every few years from all locations. Anyway, lots of things
are interesting, but we’re not here for interesting. We’re steering our ship toward “amazing!” Toward “life-changing!” And
for that you need totality.
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When can you look at a solar eclipse? Read more in our article on eclipse eye protection.
Most such modern eclipse glasses are cardboard with floppy plastic filters. They deliver a nice orange image of
the Sun but scratch easily, so be careful when handling them. See the American Astronomical Society’s guide for
approved eclipse glasses.
Alternatively, recent studies by the School of Optometry and Vision Science in Waterloo, Ontario, and by Rick
Feinberg of the American Astronomical Society, published in the September 2021 issue of the Astronomical
Journal, supports the safety of welders filter shades 12, 13, and 14. These all safely allow 6.9 hours of
continuous sun viewing. But no lower number shade is safe.
With my own eclipse tours, which date back to 1970, I’ve always supplied welder goggles. Now, with nearly a year’s
advance notice, you’d have no trouble ordering as many as you’d like from your local welding supply store.
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Totality is a narrow path that crosses from Mexico through the United States to Eastern Canada. Here are some of the
major cities which will experience totality:
Watch this video for a close-up tour of the Solar Eclipse across the map of the United States.
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Watch Video At: https://youtu.be/fmb3z--tfhM
Detailed state-by-state information can be found on nationaleclipse.com and the Great American Eclipse.
Want to know more about the experience? The 2024 total solar eclipse begins with an hour-long prologue for people in
the right place. As the Moon slides between the Earth and the Sun, it does not cover the Sun. Rather, the Sun will appear
as a crescent shape.
This prologue is a “partial” eclipse; remember that a partial eclipse can only be safely viewed using eye protection.
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A partial solar eclipse, Washington D.C., June, 2021. Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls
A good idea is to put down your eye filter when the Sun has been reduced to a thin crescent, but only to view your
surrounding countryside. Colors are saturated, shadows are stark, contrast is ramped way up. Look for dark shadow
bands moving along the ground or on the sides of buildings. Ordinary objects like cars seem somehow unfamiliar, as if
illuminated by a different kind of star than the Sun. It’s other-worldly.
As the Moon makes its final move across the Sun, you may notice points of light around the Moon’s perimeter. Called
Baily’s Beads, they rays come from the Sun streaming through the valleys along the Moon’s horizon.
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Bailey’s Beads, Total Solar Eclipse of August, 2017. Credit: NASA/Gemignani
Right at the beginning of totality (and at the very end), you may see a single bright spot shine out. It’s called a Diamond
Ring. Perhaps you can see why in the image below.
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The Diamond Ring from the August 2017 total solar eclipse. Credit: NASA/Thomas
When the hour-long partial eclipse ends, the sight through your filter will be pitch black. This means totality has begun
and now you have up to about four minutes of observing the Sun directly or even through binoculars.
Look for the corona, the Sun’s outer atmosphere, which forms a glowing ring of light surrounding what seems
like a black hole in the sky where the Sun used to be.
Observe the inky-black new Moon.
Look and listen for animals behaving strangely.
And be sure to look closely around the black Moon for pink prominences—glowing geysers of nuclear flame.
These are often small and best seen through binoculars or a small telescope. Since pointing a telescope and
having it accurately track the Sun is occasionally time consuming and you don’t want to waste a second,
binoculars may be the best bet. Image stabilized models are the best of the best.
A note of caution: If you’re using binoculars, even one second of binocular use when totality is over can damage your
retina. For maximum care, use binoculars for only a minute or less during the middle of totality. You’ll know from maps
how long totality will last from your location. Say it’s three minutes. This means you can look at it directly during the
first and last minute, and reserve binocular use for the middle minute.
Finally, beyond the mind-numbing natural phenomena of the corona, the prominences, and the odd lighting, there’s the
magical otherworldly feeling that consumes all onlookers. It’s ineffably powerful. About half the people observing solar
totality weep from the sheer beauty and emotional power of it. “The home of my soul,” is how one woman summarized
the 1980 total eclipse from northeastern India.
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But this time you don’t have to pilgrimage to India, or Australia like we did in 2012, or Libya like in 2006, or Chile like we
did in 2021. Famed NASA eclipse predictor Fred Espenak told me he once ran panting at full frantic speed along a dirt
road in Africa, trying and succeeding in keeping the eclipsed Sun visible through a tiny opening between moving clouds.
You won’t have to do that. The 2024 Total Solar Eclipse is right here at home.
Find more information about what you will see at each stage counting down to a total solar eclipse!
Looking at the eclipse map, the high-population northeast and upper Midwest is a tempting location where
millions live. But long-term satellite data show these regions to suffer from 70% or greater cloud cover averages
during April afternoons.
The clearest weather is in the Mexico section of the eclipse path, and it gets progressively less predictable as
you travel the path north. But high crime rates there will make many gravitate to the next-clearest zone, which is
Texas. You could try to book a hotel or B&B in a town in totality’s path close to the Mexican border up through
central Texas.
See our eclipse weather article about the chance of cloud cover for cities across the U.S..
It might be a good idea to take the day off from work and catch this one! A bit of bother, sure. But the reward is nothing
less than the most amazing thing you have ever seen.
Solar Eclipse
Bob Berman
Bob Berman, astronomer editor for The Old Farmer’s Almanac, covers everything under the Sun (and Moon)! Bob is the
world’s most widely read astronomer and has written ten popular books. Read More from Bob Berman
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