Wish You Had Seen Totality? Afraid You Won't Get Another Chance At A Total Solar Eclipse? Here Is A List Of Future Total USA Eclipses

Wish You Had Seen Totality? Afraid You Won't Get Another Chance At A Total Solar Eclipse? Here Is A List Of Future Total USA Eclipses.
















April 8, 2024
August 23, 2044
August 12, 2045
March 30, 2052
May 1, 2079
September 14 ,2099

Get an eclipse shirt to show you saw or loved the eclipse!

Here is a super cool map showing the paths of future US total eclipses. The next one is 7 years from now!


Eclipse Safety - Cool Things You Can Safely See During The Eclipse: And Making An Eclipse Pinhole Camera/Viewer

Afraid of damaging your eyes during the eclipse? Not sure if your glasses will give you the protection you need? Make a pinhole camera (more at the bottom of the article about this).




















Get your eclipse tshirt!


There are also quite a few other things you can do that don't involve looking at the sun!



1. Shadow Snakes - It is rare to see these during a total eclipse, but it will be worth checking. As it nears totality, check the ground for dancing snake-like line shadows. Scientists aren't exactly sure what causes them, though they speculate it could be caused by light from the eclipse being focused and refocused through cells of air in the atmosphere. The best way to see them is on a light background. Some people lay white paper or posterboard on the ground. A cement sidewalk or sand would also be a good place to look for them.


2) Watch the moon's shadow race across an open field. If you are in an open area, and the skies are clear, you will be able to see the shadow of the moon racing across the ground toward you as it begins to cover the sun. Sort of like a huge cloud.



3) Sun Cresents under trees with leaves. This is a good way to see the stages of the eclipse without looking at the sun and risk of harming your eyes. If you find a tree and watch the shadows, the leaves will create hundreds of little cresents covering the ground, mimicking where the moon is covering the sun. This is because the gaps between the leaves are acting as a pinhole camera, projecting the image of the sun on the ground.

4) Day Stars. That's right, as the moon eclipses the sun, you will be able to see the stars during the day. If you are near the path of total eclipse, you may even see Jupiter and Venus!

5) 360-degree sunset.  
When the sun is completely covered by the moon (totality), you can see what looks like a sunset in every direction on the horizon!

As you can see, there are plenty of things to do if you forgot your glasses or are concerned about your eyes. Stay safe during the eclipse guys! But don't let fear keep you from enjoying it.


Don't forget an eclipse tshirt! Let people know you saw the eclipse, or just that you're a fan of the eclipse and are in the know!


It may be safer to make a pinhole camera, since you don't actually look at the sun with one of those. You look at a projected image of it. Some good instructions for making your own pinhole camera can be found here. Remember! This device is used by standing with the sun behind you and viewing the projected image on the card stock you place on the ground or in front of you. NEVER look through your pinhole directly at the sun.















References:
Pinhole Camera - JPS NASA
Things That Will Happen During The Eclipse - Cnet


No Eclipse Glasses? Make an eclipse pinhole viewer/camera - Solar Eclipse Safety

Did you forget to purchase your eclipse glasses and discover them sold out everywhere? Don't worry! You can make a simple solar eclipse viewer with two thin, stiff pieces of white cardboard.















Punch a small pinhole in one piece of cardboard and let the sunlight fall through that hole onto the second piece of cardboard. With your BACK to the sun, let the sunlight pass over your shoulder through the pinhole and an inverted image of the sun will form on the second piece of cardboard like a "screen". To make the image brighter, move the screen closer to the pinhole. Rember, it should be a PINHOLE, not a wider hold. If you make the hole too large, you will get a sunbeam on your second piece of cardboard rather than an inverted image of the sun. Do not look through the pinhole at the sun. And never look directly at the eclipse!

And don't forget an eclipse shirt to show your enthusiasm!

Here's another good place to learn how to make an eclipse pinhole camera, projector, viewer. :)



References:
National Geographic :Build a Solar Eclipse Viewer




Solar Eclipse Safety - Make Sure Your Eclipse Glasses Are Real

Don't forget your ISO Certified Eclipse Glasses! You can buy them online or even at local hardware stores. MAKE SURE they are legit.

If you put them on, everything should look PITCH BLACK. Then if you turn and look DIRECTLY at the sun or a bright, uncoated light bulb you should see a comfortable amount of light. The genuine certified glasses also block dangerous UV and IR radiation too. Here is a breakdown if you want to look into it more.






Here is a list of Reputable Vendors of Solar Filters & Viewers


Even if you won't get a shirt on time to wear it to the eclipse, you can still get one to show your enthusiasm and that you attended! 

Music Festivals Set Up All Across Line Of Totality for The August 21st Solar Eclipse

Music festivals are setting up for a week long event in the path of the Total Solar Eclipse. If you're interested in that kind of thing, you might want to check them out. USA Today Elaborates Here


If you're looking for a more quiet experience, you might want to look them up to try to avoid those partcular hot spots. ;)

If you put them on, everything should look PITCH BLACK. Then if you turn and look DIRECTLY at the sun or a bright, uncoated light bulb you should see a comfortable amount of light. The genuine certified glasses also block dangerous UV and IR radiation too. Here is a breakdown if you want to look into it more.

Here is a list of Reputable Vendors of Solar Filters & Viewers

Even if you won't get a shirt on time to wear it to the eclipse, you can still get one to show your enthusiasm and that you attended! 

The Perseid Meteor Shower Will Be the Brightest Meteor Shower In History - Once in A Lifetime! - August 11-13th

The Perseid Meteor shower happens every year, but it will be brighter this year than usual. In fact, it won't be this bright again for 100 years, meaning you won't get a chance to see it like this again - unless you are 1-3 years old, then maybe, just maybe ;).

This year it falls between August 11th (tonight folks!) and August 13th, wih the best veiwing being on the 12th. You don't need your august solar eclipse goggles for this one, but if you're interested in our night sky, you might want to plan to step outside and watch the Perseid Meteor Shower in the next three days.

Best Seen from the Northern Hemisphere.

Did You Know You Will See Mercury and Venus During The Total Solar Eclipse?

Did you know during the total solar eclipse you will see Mercury and Venus shining near the sun? You usually can't see Mercury, because it's too close to the sun. But during totality, you will see two bright spots shining beside the sun. The sky will go dark in the middle of the day and you will have a rare glimpse of the day stars!

total solar eclipse stars and planets


Also, if you look at the ground near a tree with leaves as the moon starts to cover the sun, you will see hundreds of little cresents covering the ground, mimicing where the moon is covering the sun. This is because the gaps between the leaves are acting as a pinhole camera, projecting the image of the sun on the ground.

If you are in a large area where the land around you is flat, you will see the moon's shadow rushing across the ground towards you!

Don't look at the eclipse unless it is COMPLETELY covered - totality - AS SOON as the moon begins to pass over the sun again, put your eclipse glasses on or look away. Please don't damage your eyes! If you want to see the stages of the eclipse and you don't have ISO certified glasses, find a tree and look at the leaves shadows, it's a good way to see all the stages. ;)

10 Unique Places to Watch the August Total Solar Eclipe of 2017

Here are 10 unique locations to view the august 2017 total solar eclipse and even the time and duration you will see totality there! One of my favorites is the Great Smokey Mountain National Park in North Carolina. If I could make it there, I think that would be my location of choice. Total duration there will be 1 minute 22 seconds. Don't blink! :) And you may want to consider just watching it instead of photographing it.

Total August Solar Eclipse - What You Will See From Where You Live

Vox made a super cool animated map of what you will see of the August Solar Eclipse from where you live all over the USA! CHECK IT OUT!

Don't forget to get your eclipse tshirt on! :)

And some Eclipse Viewing Glasses that are ISO Certified.

When and Where of Totality - And How To Use Your Total Solar Eclipse Glasses

NASA Tells us exactly when and where totality will occur during this August total solar eclipse. As well as when to have your glasses on and when you can safely take them off. Put them on as the moon begins to cross over the sun, once it is COMPLETELY COVERED you can take them off to view totality, and then put them back on when the moon begins to show a sliver of the sun again. They have a handy illustration for clarity too! THEY EVEN TELL YOU EXACTLY WHEN AND WHERE IT WILL OCCUR!

And Please! Make sure your glasses are ISO CERTIFIED!

Why is The August Total Solar Eclipse Special?

Usually these eclipses happen in remote locations hard to reach. And it is rare to see a TOTAL solar eclipse. This eclipse is also giving scientists a rare view of the sun's corona. I wonder what they might discover!

"the August 21 eclipse will cross the U.S. from coast to coast, with totality visible from several major cities and other locations that are easily accessible to millions of people. The last time this happened was in June 1918, when the path of totality crossed the country from Washington State to Florida...." National Geographic explains it all HERE


When and Where will the August Total Solar Eclipse happen?

Here is a small list of Locations for the Path of Total or Partial Eclipse

The good news is, everyone in the USA should be able to see at least a partial eclipse! Make sure you have eclipse glasses to protect your eyes! (or here if you want more stylin ones ;) )Even if you aren't in the path of totality, you should step outside and see the partial eclipse!

You could also get your eclipse style on with some t-shirts or hoodies!

Did You Know the August Total Solar Eclipse Will Give Scientists a Rare Chance to Study Sun’s Corona?

Did you know French astronomer Pierre Janssen discovered the element helium when he detected a yellow emission line during a solar eclipse in 1868!

Scientists are taking this opportunity to study the sun again. The next time an eclipse will provide this perfect of conditions again won't be until 2024.


"On Aug. 21, as millions of Americans prepare to watch a total solar eclipse from the ground — wearing their safety spectacles, natch — a small team of scientists will hop aboard a Gulfstream V jet in Tennessee. Time will be short. The plane, a research aircraft owned by the National Science Foundation, will race to intercept the path of the moon's shadow and follow it as long as it can. The astrophysicists, once they're above southern Kentucky, should have a four-minute window to record the ghost of the missing sun...." READ THE FULL ARTICLE

Could The Path of the Solar Eclipse Already be Altering our Behavior?

I'm not sure if this is just the Washington Post trying to make the total solar eclipse be the most photographed, shared, tweeted event in history, or if it is already actually altering our behavior. But in my opinion, we should all be aware and I hope nobody misses this! Even if you aren't in the path of totality, some places will still see the sky darken, I'm sure it is going to impact many!

The Washington Post says:
"The upcoming solar eclipse is poised to become the “most photographed, most shared, most tweeted event in human history,” in the words of one astronomer. Millions of people will watch it, potentially overwhelming the cities and towns along the eclipse's path of totality...." READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE

If you are planning on watching it, don't forget your glasses! Or some more stylin ones.

You can even get your Eclipse style on!