How to Safely View a Total Solar Eclipse

Did you know that a total solar eclipse is coming up on April 8, 2024?

This one is primarily visible from North America; you can find more information about where to see it (and if it’ll be visible from your location) over here on TimeAndDate.com.

I was planning to travel to “totality” myself, but those plans fell through because I couldn’t get the time off work. Nevertheless, I’ll be helping out at a viewing event up north of Joshua Tree National Park!

In this post, I’ll take you through what you’ll see during a total solar eclipse–and, at each phase, I’ll let you know exactly how to safely view the sun!

(Later this week, we’ll be back to our regularly scheduled programming on active galaxies.)

Important: Always use solar glasses and solar filters that conform to the safety standard ISO 12312-2. Be careful! There are bad actors on the market that print this standard on unsafe equipment. Use this list of trustworthy suppliers from the American Astronomical Society.

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The Annular Eclipse

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An annular solar eclipse is…an interesting sight, to say the least.

(I sincerely hope the photographer didn’t fry his camera taking this picture. Enough light from the sun is still reaching us to fry your retina, or damage your optics…)

The annular eclipse is not to be confused with an annual eclipse. When my dad first got excited about it back in 2012, preparing us for the spectacular sight of a solar eclipse in May, I wondered why the heck we hadn’t done this every year before. I’d just never heard the word “annular” before!

Since there’s an annular solar eclipse coming up in just over a week, I thought I’d touch up this post from back in 2017! (Don’t worry–we will soon be back to our “regularly scheduled programming” on galaxies.)

So…what exactly is an annular solar eclipse?

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