DEDICADO À OBSERVAÇÃO SEGURA DO ECLIPSE SOLAR TOTAL DE 8 DE ABRIL DE 2024!
The eclipse is over.
We hope you enjoyed it!
 
 
Um outro ECLIPSE TOTAL
está chegando à
América do Norte!

É o Grande Eclipse da América do Norte!
...e queremos que todos vejam!
 
O uso deste site depende de sua compreensão e concordância de que leu este link, concorda com seu conteúdo e deve cumprir todas as regras de bom senso e protocolos bem estabelecidos de segurança dos olhos ao observar qualquer fenômeno solar.
 
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"Close" is NOT close enough!

Our Letter to the editor, in response to his readers' possible decision to forsake the path:

Order Solar Eclipse Glasses, Made in USA

I am a veteran of 15 total solar eclipses, and I operate the site www.eclipse2024.org – which has as its primary mission the offering of information regarding the safe, enjoyable viewing of the total solar eclipse which will occur on April 8, 2024.

Our task is to convince people who are not in the path of totality, that they simply must travel into the path, in order to see one of the most spectacular things they will ever see in their life. The task is difficult, because it is natural to believe that if one is “close” to the path, one will see something that is “pretty good”. But just as the person who only smells the meal outside the restaurant remains hungry, so too do those who observe the eclipse from outside the path of totality end the day wondering what, indeed, all the fuss was about.

For those who experience this eclipse outside the path, a partial eclipse is all they will see. Even if the sun is 99.9% eclipsed for these observers, they will not experience the full, jaw-dropping, knee-buckling, emotionally-overloading, completely overwhelming spectacle that is totality.

Partial eclipses are somewhat interesting, in that with the proper eye protection (which MUST be used at all times), one can see the Moon moving slowly across the face of the Sun. But there is no climax, no culmination of the event, no exhilarating moment of true beauty in the sky above them. The event is interesting, but it is not memorable, not life-changing, not anything to inspire one to join the ranks of “umbraphiles” – “shadow-loving” persons who travel the world to the most remote locations, in anticipation of experiencing those few fleeting seconds of wonderment inside the shadow of the moon.

For those outside the path, there is no dramatic moment of totality, no beautiful Diamond Ring gracing the edge of the Moon’s disk, no intense darkening of the skies, no stars and planets suddenly revealing themselves against an impossible twilight, no corona flashing into view (the otherworldly beauty of which makes even veteran total eclipse observers gasp in amazement), and no primordial fear which sinks ever so slightly even the modern heart. There is no pitch-blackened disk of the Sun, no discernable temperature drop, no impossible nighttime during the day, no scintillating chromosphere or glorious prominences, no 360-degree sunset effect around the horizon, no uncontrollable shouts of emotional overload from the assembled crowd, and no lingering post-eclipse sensation of certainty that you have just experienced one of the coolest things you’ll ever see in your life.

A partial eclipse is interesting but forgettable, while a total eclipse is a memorable, life-changing event which burns itself into memory – and never fades. And so we, who have seen this sight, ask you to join us on this momentous day, and do everything you possibly can to see it with us. But you must remember that “close” is not close enough; in order to see the eclipse in all its glory, you simply must…

Get thee to the path!