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2024 Total Eclipse: Where & When

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The Monday, April 8, 2024, total solar eclipse will cross North America, passing over Mexico, the United States, and Canada. The total solar eclipse will begin over the South Pacific Ocean. Weather permitting, the first location in continental North America that will experience totality is Mexico’s Pacific coast at around 11:07 a.m. PDT.

The path of the eclipse continues from Mexico, entering the United States in Texas, and traveling through Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. Small parts of Tennessee and Michigan will also experience the total solar eclipse. The eclipse will enter Canada in Southern Ontario, and continue through Quebec, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Cape Breton. The eclipse will exit continental North America on the Atlantic coast of Newfoundland, Canada, at 5:16 p.m. NDT.

This table provides the time that totality begins in some U.S. cities in the path of totality. These areas will also experience a partial eclipse before and after these times.

LocationPartial BeginsTotality BeginsMaximumTotality EndsPartial Ends
Dallas, Texas12:23 p.m. CDT1:40 p.m. CDT1:42 p.m. CDT1:44 p.m. CDT3:02 p.m. CDT
Idabel, Oklahoma12:28 p.m. CDT1:45 p.m. CDT1:47 p.m. CDT1:49 p.m. CDT3:06 p.m. CDT
Little Rock, Arkansas12:33 p.m. CDT1:51 p.m. CDT1:52 p.m. CDT1:54 p.m. CDT3:11 p.m. CDT
Poplar Bluff, Missouri12:39 p.m. CDT1:56 p.m. CDT1:56 p.m. CDT2:00 p.m. CDT3:15 p.m. CDT
Paducah, Kentucky12:42 p.m. CDT2:00 p.m. CDT2:01 p.m. CDT2:02 p.m. CDT3:18 p.m. CDT
Carbondale, Illinois12:42 p.m. CDT1:59 p.m. CDT2:01 p.m. CDT2:03 p.m. CDT3:18 p.m. CDT
Evansville, Indiana12:45 p.m. CDT2:02 p.m. CDT2:04 p.m. CDT2:05 p.m. CDT3:20 p.m. CDT
Cleveland, Ohio1:59 p.m. EDT3:13 p.m. EDT3:15 p.m. EDT3:17 p.m. EDT4:29 p.m. EDT
Erie, Pennsylvania2:02 p.m. EDT3:16 p.m. EDT3:18 p.m. EDT3:20 p.m. EDT4:30 p.m. EDT
Buffalo, New York2:04 p.m. EDT3:18 p.m. EDT3:20 p.m. EDT3:22 p.m. EDT4:32 p.m. EDT
Burlington, Vermont2:14 p.m. EDT3:26 p.m. EDT3:27 p.m. EDT3:29 p.m. EDT4:37 p.m. EDT
Lancaster, New Hampshire2:16 p.m. EDT3:27 p.m. EDT3:29 p.m. EDT3:30 p.m. EDT4:38 p.m. EDT
Caribou, Maine2:22 p.m. EDT3:32 p.m. EDT3:33 p.m. EDT3:34 p.m. EDT4:40 p.m. EDT

Share your experience with us if you have experienced this.
 
I’ve only seen one back in 99 in the UK, incredible phenomenon.

The moon & sun have to be a particular size & distance for this to even occur . And yet people think their is no design & no Creator.
 
the last time it happened, in london, a partial eclipse, I was working and everyone started sharing total eclipse of the heart on Bloomberg chats, lol.

i love how it goes cold all of a sudden when an eclipse happens. must have scared the daylights (excuse the pun) out of ancient civilisations, esp sun worshippers.
 
Crowds gathering to watch the eclipse from the National Mall or NASA Goddard Visitor Center on Monday would partake in a human tradition that predates written history -- although records of eclipses stretch back thousands of years.

According to a NASA article, petroglyphs found in County Meath, Ireland, may be our earliest records of an eclipse; they date back to 3340 B.C.E. Scribes in Anyang, China, wrote on shells and bones that "the sun has been eaten" around 1200 B.C.E. Much later, the 1918 eclipse helped confirm Albert Einstein's theory of relativity, rocketing the physicist to fame, according to the National Park Service.


NBC Washington
 
Severe storms may pose a threat to solar eclipse viewers

Excited eclipse watchers, watch out: Weather could complicate attempts to see the epic astronomical phenomenon in parts of the Southwest.

Clouds and storms could hinder the ability to see the eclipse in its full glory in several spots along the path of totality — where the moon will completely block out the sun.

The most ideal weather for the eclipse will likely occur in two general areas: from Vermont through Maine, as well as Missouri through southern Indiana. Only a few isolated clouds are expected for these areas, which should not prevent optimal eclipse viewing. So get your eclipse glasses ready for places like Evansville, Ind.; Carbondale, Ill.; Burlington, Vt.; and Caribou, Maine.

Some of the locations with less-than-ideal weather include portions of the eastern Great Lakes and much of Texas.
Cleveland, Ohio, and Erie, Penn., have a chance of rain mainly in the morning, but scattered cloud cover may be slow to exit the area even after the rain ends. The extent of the cloud cover all hinges on how quickly a warm front advances eastward.

Farther east in Buffalo and Rochester, New York, cloud cover is expected to be between mostly cloudy and overcast — which will limit the viewing of the eclipse pretty significantly.


CNN
 
Solar eclipse’s economic impact

Today's total solar eclipse could spark $6 billion in economic activity. With the eclipse's path crossing from Texas to Maine, businesses from hotels to AirBnBs are gearing up for a surge in visitors. This rare event, drawing global crowds, promises a significant boost to the U.S. economy, offering diverse spending opportunities on accommodations, dining, and more. The Perryman Group's analysis anticipates a larger impact than the 2017 eclipse, with the next similar event not until 2044.
 

Huge crowds await a total solar eclipse in North America. Clouds may spoil the view​


Millions of spectators along a narrow corridor stretching from Mexico to the U.S. to Canada eagerly awaited Monday’s celestial sensation — a total eclipse of the sun _ even as forecasters called for clouds.

It promised to be North America’s biggest eclipse crowd ever, thanks to the densely populated path and the lure of more than four minutes of midday darkness in Texas and other choice spots. Almost everyone in North America was guaranteed at least a partial eclipse, weather permitting. The show gets underway in the Pacific shortly before noon EDT.

In Texas, the south-central region was locked in clouds, but it was a little bit better to the northeast, said National Weather Service meteorologist Cody Snell.

“Dallas is pretty much a 50-50 shot,” he said.

The cliff-hanging uncertainty added to the drama. Rain or shine, “it’s just about sharing the experience with other people,” said Chris Lomas from Gotham, England, who was staying at a sold-out trailer resort outside Dallas, the biggest city in totality’s path.

 
Respected posters from the USA and Canada, if you capture photos or videos of the solar eclipse, please do share them with us here
 
A total solar eclipse is passing over North America on April 8, creating a path of totality that will cast some parts of Mexico, the United States and Canada in darkness.

About 31 million people live along the path of totality and will be able to witness a total eclipse, but the majority of Americans will be able to see at least a partial eclipse.

ABC News
 
The solar eclipse has begun for viewers in Mexico, the first in North America to see the moon block the sun's light. The eclipse will cross into the United States over Texas next.
 
We had about 80% eclipse where I live. You can easily perceive the clear dimming of the Sun. Pretty cool experience.

Folks who've experienced the total eclipse are immensely lucky to see that celestial event.
 
Had a fun time watching it with my kids even though we got about 92% coverage. Pretty spectacular but I did get a headache afterwards by peeking through those dark glasses.
 
Total solar eclipse: North Americans celebrate with cheers, music and matrimony

Throngs of skywatchers across North America gazed upward at a blackened sun in the midday dusk on Monday, celebrating with cheers, music and matrimony the first total solar eclipse to darken the continent in seven years.

From a Mexican beach resort close to where the eclipse made landfall to the banks of the Ohio River and farther north beyond the roaring cascades of Niagara Falls at the U.S.-Canadian border, spellbound crowds reacted to the sight of "totality" with jaw-dropping expressions of awe and joy.

In Russellville, Arkansas, a town of roughly 30,000 residents near the state's only nuclear power plant, almost 400 couples tied the knot by the shadow of the moon in a mass wedding event dubbed "Elope and the Eclipse."

At least two weddings and one marriage proposal were known to have taken place among roughly 2,000 people who assembled at Niagara Falls State Park despite overcast skies.

The dreary weather subdued the experience until clouds momentarily parted to reveal the last 30 seconds of totality, and the crowd went wild, cheering and shouting, "It's so beautiful."

As the skies began to brighten again, a band played out the retreating lunar shadow with a rendition the R.E.M.'s 1992 hit song "Man on the Moon.

Across the river in Niagara Falls, Ontario, 309 people - some from as far away as Singapore and London - came dressed up as the sun, setting a new world record for the largest group to wear solar costumes in one place, contest organizers said. The previous record was set in 2020 by 287 participants in China.


Reuters
 
Bonnie Tyler - Total Eclipse Of The Heart, should have had her sing that while she watched it
 
Total solar eclipse: Continent watches in wonder

Across Mexico, the US and Canada, inside a ribbon of land stretching 155 miles wide but more than 4,000 miles long, tens of millions of people craned their necks, tilted their heads to the sky and watched in wonder as the day turned to night.

What many saw on Monday was a phenomenon like no other: the Moon moving between the Earth and the Sun, extinguishing its light in a total solar eclipse.

The path of totality spanned the continent, beginning over the warm sands of a Mexican beach town and darkening the skies above the crashing waters of Niagara Falls before ending its journey on the shores of Canada's Newfoundland.

It left a sense of awe in its wake, a reminder of our planet's place in the universe.

The eclipse was first seen around Mazatlán, Mexico, on the country's western shores at 11:07 local time (18:07 GMT).

At first, the Moon's outer edge seemed to just be touching the Sun. Then it devoured more and more until cheers erupted as all finally went dark - save for the silvery glow of the "corona" effect of the Sun around the Moon's outline.

A thousand miles away in Dallas, Texas, 11-year-old Ady Walton-King was waiting, weeks of pent-up excitement ready to burst.

She had learned all about the eclipse in her fifth-grade class at Dallas Academy and on Monday morning she laced up her shoes and tucked four pairs of eclipse glasses into her pink purse - one for herself, one for each parent and one for her little sister, Abigail.

Just before it started, Ady sat down beside her dad, Ryan, on a school field in central Dallas and lifted her gaze upward.

And then it happened.

It all felt slow, she said, as she described the Texas afternoon turning dark. "It looked like the Moon was biting the Sun, but without the teeth marks."

Clouds slid in and out, occasionally blocking the eclipse from view until the Sun had vanished, nothing left but little flares of light around the Moon.

"I didn't think it would be like that," Ady said. "It was really dark out. I thought it would be like evening dark, but it was pretty close to pitch black."

The temperature dropped suddenly and, just as she had been taught, animals fell silent.

"As it started to get lighter the crickets were there, and the birds started singing. It was really crazy," she said. "I'm sad it's over."

From there, the eclipse moved on, carving its path north-east through the United States.

For some, the solar phenomenon was marked by a personal milestone, with hundreds of Americans joining one of several mass wedding events dotted across the path of totality.

In Russellville, Arkansas, 300 couples from across the country signed up, saying "I do" just before the sky went black. As the sky brightened, the group cut wedding cakes and danced - all part of the aptly named Total Eclipse of the Heart festival.

Following the Moon one state over, in Ellsinore, Missouri, was amateur astronomer Darcy Howard, who had driven from her home in central Arkansas to be sure bad weather didn't block her view.

She had seen many eclipses before today, two totals, one annular and two partials. "Each one has its own fingerprint," she said.

Totality today, at around 13:56 local time (18:56 GMT) brought an "eerie twilight", Ms Howard said, with dusky colours dotted all along the horizon. The corona was nearly as bright as a full moon. "The sense of other-worldliness was all around," she said.

The 70-year-old has loved the cosmos since her childhood, since her father showed her the Big Dipper, the North Star and the Milky Way, and bought her her first telescope.

"I was hooked," she said. "I can look through a telescope and see Jupiter… I can see Saturn. And when I see that in space, I know all is right with the world."

By 15:13 local time (20:13 GMT), the total eclipse had plunged the midwestern state of Ohio into darkness.

In Cleveland, where eclipse-watchers were graced by clear skies, the Sun's corona was clearly visible, a brilliant halo framing the Moon.

The stars came out in the middle of the day, a sight met with cheers and fireworks, a mid-April New Years Eve.

Many big American cities were not lucky enough to be on the path of totality - but the spectacles were still awe-inspiring. In New York, hundreds of people crowded on to the viewing platform of the Edge skyscraper in Manhattan to see what they could see.

They did not leave disappointed as the sun shrank to a crescent-like sliver of light that cast an unearthly pale gloom over the city.

Tourists had crowded along both sides of the border at Niagara Falls, where the eclipse path crossed from the US into Canada.

Here, the weather offered a formidable challenge, with thick grey clouds mostly obscuring the sky from view.

But just in time for totality - to the audible delight of the crowd - the clouds parted to reveal the black-hole Sun.

Nearby, on a Niagara City Cruise, 309 people celebrated by record-breaking - dressing up as the Sun to break the Guinness World Record for "Largest gathering of people dressed as the Sun".

The relentless motion of the heavenly bodies meant that the phenomenon did not last long, and it was Montreal that next got its chance to be plunged into temporary night.

In Montreal, 20,000 people crowded onto a field on McGill University's campus for an event held by the school's Trottier Space Institute.

"We had been expecting 8,000," programme administrator Caroina Cruz-Vinaccia said after. The weather was perfect, clear and bright skies. At the moment of totality, the crowd erupted at once, she said.

"I still can't quite find the words for how cool this was," she said. "We're still coming down."

Crowds were smaller on Newfoundland's Fogo Island, on Canada's east coast - one of the last places the totality could be viewed.

Bethany Downery, a Newfoundland native who works for the European Space Agency, tuned into the spectacular view from the Fogo Island Inn, nestled right against the Atlantic Ocean.

The skies were overcast, she said, but the clouds moved miraculously in time to catch near totality.

And with that, a day of collective wonder and celebration reached its conclusion. But it had left a permanent mark on many of those who had witnessed it.

In Dallas, a few thousand miles back along the path, Ady Walton-King was making plans.

Texas will not be in the path of totality again for another 300 years, so she'll have to travel for the next one in North America, in 2044.

And by that time, she'll be even more of an expert on total eclipses. "I want to be a scientist by the time that happens," she said.

BBC
 

Pakistan to miss last solar eclipse of 2024: PMD​


The second and final solar eclipse of 2024 is set to occur on the night of October 2-3, but it will not be visible in Pakistan, according to the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD).

The solar eclipse will commence at 8:45pm as per local time.

The meteorological department has stated that the eclipse will be observable in regions of North and South America, as well as Antarctica.

However, residents of Pakistan will not be able to witness this celestial event.

The annular solar eclipse, also referred to as a "ring of fire" eclipse, is set to take place on October 2, primarily visible over parts of southern Chile and Argentina.

This event marks the first solar eclipse since April when eleven contiguous states in the US were in the path of totality.

An annular solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes directly over the sun’s disk but is at a point in its orbit farther from Earth.

This positioning results in most of the sun being obscured, leaving a bright ring visible around the edges, hence the term "ring of fire."

According to Space.com, the path of annularity will be limited, running through specific southern regions of Chile and Argentina, where approximately 175,000 residents reside within this path.

In contrast, the previous April eclipse had a much larger population of 32 million in the US within its path of totality.

In Chile and Argentina, the annularity will last only between three to six minutes.

On Rapa Nui (Easter Island), the eclipse will be observable around 2:03pm local time. Notable viewing spots include Perito Moreno National Park, Puerto Deseado, and Puerto San Julián in Argentina, as well as the town of Cochrane in Chile.

A partial solar eclipse will accompany the annular event, visible approximately 85 minutes before and after the ring of fire. This partial eclipse will be observed across parts of South America, Antarctica, North America, and the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, including Hawaii. Key locations for viewing the partial eclipse include Buenos Aires, São Paulo, and Asunción.

To safely observe the annular solar eclipse, it is crucial to wear proper eye protection, as the sun is never completely covered.

Regular sunglasses do not provide adequate protection. Safe solar viewers and filters are essential, as they are significantly darker than regular sunglasses. Alternatively, observers can create a pinhole projector to safely view the eclipse by projecting the sun's image onto a nearby surface.

Source: The Express Tribune
 
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