Enjoy the Eclipse, but watch out for the cosmologists and druids!

Ahead of tomorrow’s total eclipse of the Sun visible from a large part of the USA, I can’t resist sharing this excerpt from The Times warning about the consequences of a mass influx of people to Cornwall for the total eclipse of the Sun that was visible on August 11th 1999, almost 25 years ago. No doubt there are similar things going around about tomorrow’s eclipse:

I did write a letter to the Times complaining that, as a cosmologist, I felt this was very insulting… to druids. They didn’t publish it.

Anyway, I did get to see the total solar eclipse of 1999, not from Cornwall (where it was overcast and rainy) but from the island of Alderney (one of the Channel Islands). There was quite a lot of cloud cover in the morning of the big event so I was expecting to be disappointed. Indeed, the very start of the eclipse was hidden by cloud and there were groans from the large crowd assembled to watch it. A few seconds later, however, the clouds parted and we got a wonderful view. I remember very well that it seemed to get much colder during totality and an eery wind started to blow. Another thing is that all the birds thought it was night already and started to roost, although it was only around 11am.

You might think astronomers would be a bit indifferent to eclipses because they are well understood and totally predictable. But to experience an eclipse in person has a very powerful effect (or did on me anyway). We may be scientists but we don’t respond entirely rationally to everything. Nor should we.

Here’s a (not very good) scan of a (slightly damaged) picture from that eclipse:

Anyway, tomorrow (i.e. 8th April 2024) the total solar eclipse crosses North America with parts of 15 states able to view it: the eclipse will first appear along Mexico’s Pacific Coast at around 11:07 a.m. PDT, then travel across a swath of the U.S., from Texas to Maine, and into Canada. About 31.6 million people live in the path of totality. The path will range between 108 and 122 miles wide. An additional 150 million people live within 200 miles of the path of totality.

Do make the effort to see it if you can. It’s a remarkable experience that will live long in your memory. But watch out for the cosmologists and druids!

4 Responses to “Enjoy the Eclipse, but watch out for the cosmologists and druids!”

  1. Anton Garrett's avatar
    Anton Garrett Says:

    Canada’s Niagara region has declared a state of emergency because of the expected influx of eclipse tourists. Snowflakes!

    In 1999 I too was on Alderney, the only one of the Channel Islands to experience totality, and it was as you say. I remember also the supersonically travelling darker bands as totality neared:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_bands

    A friend saw it from atop an Alp, and had a spectacular view.

  2. We have a team in Texas to observe the eclipse but at the moment the weather forecast does not look good. Another one of our group is in Mexico to see it, and it looks like he will have a better chance. He’s an ‘eclipse chaser’ and has witnessed lots of them.

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