Chicago Sun-Times

A SLIVER OF SUN AMONG THE CLOUDS

Thousands at Adler Planetariu­m event granted a glimpse at partial eclipse through overcast skies

- BY EMILY MOON Staff Reporter | ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES PHOTOS Email: emoon@suntimes. com Twitter: @emilym_ moon

Just minutes before the eclipse reached its height in Chicago, clouds covered the sun above the Adler Planetariu­m.

“It’s going, it’s going, it’s gone,” one volunteer announced Monday, while onlookers groaned.

Under heavy cloud cover, the eclipse was not visible. But as the minutes ticked away, visitors remained hopeful.

Then at 1: 19 p. m. when the sun peeked in and out of the clouds, the crowd cheered as the moon obscured 87 percent of the sun — the closest Chicago would get to a total eclipse.

“It looks like someone took a bite out of a cookie,” 7- year- old Clara Baker said.

“It looks like the moon,” Gregory Primus, 10, said. “But if you look at it closely, it looks like the moon is blocking the sun.”

Despite dark skies, more than 30,000 people donned protective glasses and peered through pinholes at the Adler Planetariu­m’s Eclipse Fest to viewthe closest total solar eclipse to the city in 92 years.

“It’s one of those times where space really gets down to earth,” said Andrew Johnston, vice president of astronomy and collection­s at Adler Planetariu­m.

Johnston said a total eclipse last crossed the United States in the 1920s. “There’s an eclipse every year and a half, roughly, somewhere in the world,” he said. “What’s unusual is that for so many people, here in America, they don’t have to domuch traveling at all. It’s in their backyards. That’s whatmakes it special.”

Johnston said it’s not necessaril­y more dangerous to look at the sun during an eclipse. “Our brains are usually pretty good— we look at the sun and it hurts, so we look away,” he said. With the sun obscured, it’s no longer painful to look, but it can still cause permanent damage.

Although the 30,000 glasses ran out within hours, thousands of visitors peeked through the planetariu­m’s DIY projectors, toured the exhibits inside and made sun dials and solar ovens at activity booths.

Shannon Gedey and her son Graham, 6, were among that crowd, viewing the eclipse through homemade pinhole projectors, which they built fromdiaper and cereal boxes. “This is a low- budget hack,” Gedey said.

With the sun behind him, Graham peered through the cardboard to monitor the tiny crescent of light.

For some, the events on Earth were just as exciting as the one in space. Marlena Bergeron was visiting from Georgia, where she would have been in the path of totality, but said she still enjoyed the Chicago fest.

“We’re just happy to be in a place where it’s total fun,” she said. “It’s definitely a party.”

Chicago residents Sarah Yale and Alex Weiner had even more to celebrate. The couple became engaged at the planetariu­m last year and celebrated their one- year anniversar­y this summer.

“We didn’t plan this, though,” Yale said of the timing. “It’s neat to share this experience, to be a part of something that’s bigger than you.”

If you didn’t “get outside and soak it in,” as Johnston advised Chicago area residents, no worries. You can catch the next one in 2024.

 ??  ?? ABOVE: The crowd outside the Adler Planetariu­m looks skyward Monday. LEFT: Two women look for the sun in the overcast sky during Adler Planetariu­m’s Eclipse Fest.
ABOVE: The crowd outside the Adler Planetariu­m looks skyward Monday. LEFT: Two women look for the sun in the overcast sky during Adler Planetariu­m’s Eclipse Fest.
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 ??  ?? A view of Monday’s partial solar eclipse, as seen from Adler Planetariu­m’s Eclipse Fest.
A view of Monday’s partial solar eclipse, as seen from Adler Planetariu­m’s Eclipse Fest.

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