Times Colonist

SOLAR ECLIPSE

CAPITAL REGION ASTRONOMY ENTHUSIAST­S PREPARE FOR MOON’S BLOTTING OUT OF SUN ON AUG. 21

- JEFF BELL

Victoria’s Karun Thanjavur will be hitting the road to get the best view of the total solar eclipse coming to North American skies on Aug. 21.

He and a group of friends plan to camp out on Mount Jefferson in southern Oregon, near Bend, said Thanjavur, a senior astronomy lab instructor at the University of Victoria. It is close to where the eclipse will first be visible on the continent, and a prime viewing point within the “path of totality” — the area where the moon will completely block the sun.

The path of totality for this eclipse is a swath about 113 kilometres wide that extends diagonally across the United States from west to east. Victoria viewers will see about 90 per cent coverage from the eclipse, leaving just a narrow crescent of the sun uncovered.

“Ten per cent of light is still very bright,” Thanjavur said. “Just from looking around you, people may not notice a big dimming.”

National Research Council astronomer Ken Tapping said Thanjavur stands to be part of a large influx of Canadians heading to Oregon, including some from the NRC. Several members of the Victoria chapter of the Royal Astronomy Society of Canada will also be there.

“I gather that every hotel along the path of totality is really, really heavily booked,” Tapping said.

Thanjavur said a solar eclipse happens when the moon is aligned between the Earth and the sun, casting the moon’s shadow onto the Earth’s surface. A total eclipse is quite a spectacle, he said.

“It is very remarkable, just to see the sun completely blocked out.”

Not only does the sky darken, but the temperatur­e drops, something Thanjavur experience­d during his first total solar eclipse in Africa in 2001. “Definitely, it feels very much like dusk for a brief period,” he said.

Tapping said that while total solar eclipses happen almost annually around the world, it can be years between occurrence­s in any given area. The next one visible in the Victoria area is due to happen on April 8, 2024.

Eclipses are “incredible things,” Tapping said. “Even if you don’t see totality, it is really, really magical.”

A range of sites will be good for local viewing, said Jonathan Geehan, who has a master’s degree in astronomy and will help lead a new astronomy course at Victoria High School.

“Really, anywhere that you can see the sun in the sky on the morning of Aug. 21 will work.”

He said the eclipse starts at 9:08 a.m. and ends at 11:37 a.m., with this area’s maximum partial eclipse coming at 10:20 a.m.

Thanjavur said interest in the eclipse is evident at UVic’s weekly astronomy open houses. “I can definitely sense an excitement in astronomy in the general public.”

All three men stressed the need to use special solar viewers or to take other safety measures when looking at the eclipse — sunglasses are not sufficient.

Proper glasses will be given out at the eclipse-viewing event at UVic’s Bob Wright Building at 10 a.m.

Filtered telescopes that provide safe viewing will also be available.

“The problem, basically, is the sun is dangerous to stare at, period,” Tapping said. “Without proper eye protection, with the emphasis on the word ‘proper,’ you shouldn’t stare at it during an eclipse.”

 ??  ?? Astronomer Karun Thanjavur sets up a modified telescope — it projects an image of the sun — that will be used for viewing the Aug. 21 solar eclipse from the roof of the Bob Wright Building at the University of Victoria.
Astronomer Karun Thanjavur sets up a modified telescope — it projects an image of the sun — that will be used for viewing the Aug. 21 solar eclipse from the roof of the Bob Wright Building at the University of Victoria.

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