Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Prepare to be awed

Solar eclipses have taught scientists new things about the universe for millennia. This one should help us unlock some ongoing mysteries, explains Slate’s CHAU TU

- Chau Tu is an associate editor for Slate, where this first appeared.

When humans first witnessed solar eclipses, they did not know what to think. In South America, they believed giant jaguars were chasing and catching the sun. In Scandinavi­a, it was demon sky wolves. In ancient Hindu mythology, the darkness was caused by the god Rahu devouring the orb. If Earthlings made a riot loud enough, sometimes they were able to scare Rahu enough that he only ate a part of it, leaving a sliver of light visible in the sky.

Today, we know that a scared Rahu actually meant a partial solar eclipse — and no human interventi­on would have made a difference. We learned this after centuries of human observatio­n and scientific advancemen­t. And on Aug. 21, when North America witnesses its first total solar eclipse in the region in nearly a century, we’ll be hoping to learn a little more.

The continent’s residents are already gearing up for the event. It’s estimated that approximat­ely 12 million people live in the “path of totality” — that is, the stretch of land where viewers can witness the moon eclipse the sun perfectly, blotting out all light from the sun, except for the ring of its corona.

The eclipse will begin at 9:05 a.m. PDT at Lincoln Beach, Ore., and stretch across the country to near Charleston, S.C., where the phenomenon will conclude at 2:48 p.m. EDT. Hotels and campsites along the path of totality have been booked for months. Depending on where you are, the eclipse’s total darkness will last around two minutes; in Carbondale, Ill., viewers will be able to see it the longest, for about 2.5 minutes.

That sounds like a short amount of time, but history proves how much we still could learn.

Confirming relativity

According to NASA, the first known written records of people paying attention to eclipses are from around 5,000 years ago. It wasn’t until some 2,600 years later, around 500 B.C., that Greek philosophe­rs like Anaxagoras began figuring out that eclipses were simply the play of shadows. By 425 B.C., there was evidence that Babylonian­s could predict them.

In a total lunar eclipse, for instance, the Earth moves between the sun and the moon, casting a shadow on the moon. Seeing the consistent­ly round shadow is what caused Aristotle to conclude that the planet had to be spherical. “I’d say that’s really the first big scientific result about our place in the universe, was figuring that out,” says Tyler Nordgren, the author of “Sun Moon Earth: The History of Solar Eclipses From Omens of Doom to Einstein and Exoplanets.”

Eclipses have helped us reach many other conclusion­s that seem rather obvious now. Anaxagoras used solar eclipses, where the moon is moving in front of the sun, to conclude that the sun had to be farther away than the moon from Earth. British astronomer Francis Baily made the first detailed observatio­ns that the sun’s corona (its outer atmosphere) and prominence­s (large features extending from the surface) were in fact part of the sun and not the moon, because he was able to see the moon moving across the corona during solar eclipses.

Scientists were even able to prove Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity was accurate using an eclipse: Photograph­ing the stars

near the sun during and after a 1919 total solar eclipse over South America and Africa, the scientists determined the stars did seem to move position, meaning their light was likely being bent by the sun in four-dimensiona­l space-time.

Scientists over the moon

To say scientists are excited by the possibilit­ies offered by this month’s eclipse is an understate­ment. Eclipses — solar and lunar, partial and total — do occur every few months, but the areas from which we can see them are basically random and often end up being over oceans or on very small swaths of land. (There will be another solar eclipse over North America in April 2024,but it will appear over a smaller stretch.

The occasion of a total solar eclipse allows scientists a unique opportunit­y to observe things about and around the sun that we normally can’t see because of, well, sunlight. Namely, blocking out the sun will allow us to explore the sun’s corona, Mercury and nearby stars in more detail. We might learn more about stars in general — how they form, what other stars’ circling habitable planets might be like, and so on.

“We know a lot about the sun, and yet there’s so much basic fundamenta­l stuff we still don’t know,” says Amir Caspi, an astrophysi­cist at the Southwest Research Institute.

For one, there’s the mystery of why the sun’s corona is so hot. While the visible surface of the sun is about 5,500 degrees Celsius, the corona, just beyond that surface, is more than 1 million degrees — and no one knows why. According to Mr. Caspi, one of the leading theories is wave heating. Think of how radio waves in a microwave don’t actually generate heat but can cause the water molecules in your food to vibrate, which heats them up. The idea of wave heating suggests that something similar might be happening with waves coming out of the sun’s magnetic field.

Another leading theory is that the sun’s corona contains nanoflares — like solar flares but so small you can’t see them individual­ly — that are like little firecracke­rs exploding across the corona all the time and all at once, generating a constant source of heat for the outer layer.

But no one knows for sure, which is one reason Mr. Caspi, the principal investigat­or on a NASA funded mission to observe the eclipse from the air, will be studying the sun’s corona closely.

Flashing on and off

On Aug. 21, two WB-57s — long-wing bombers that NASA has repurposed — will fly at a high altitude from St. Louis to Nashville to chase the eclipse’s shadow. As opposed to the two minutes that people on the ground will be able to see the full eclipse, those on the aircraft will be able to see it for up to seven-and-ahalf minutes. Telescopes and cameras on the planes will capture the eclipse at high speeds, hopefully fast enough to catch something that might indicate whether the wave or nano flare theory, or a combinatio­n of the two, is true. The mission also hopes to capture some informatio­n on why the loops and streamers coming out of the corona seem to work in a concerted, organized way and also to take some rare thermal images of Mercury.

Another NASA-sponsored study, meanwhile, will try to observe Earth’s own upper atmosphere, specifical­ly the charged layer called the ionosphere. The ionosphere is only very charged during the daytime, when energy from the sun and its corona feed extreme ultraviole­t photons into this area, creating free electrons and ions. At night, with no sun, the ionosphere is much less charged. But during an eclipse, the sun essentiall­y turns off and back on again very quickly, says physicist Philip Erickson. And observing this rapid succession of events is more useful than any sort of modeling scientists are usually able to do.

Scientists are interested in the ionosphere and its chemistry because it affects our radio-wave communicat­ion here on Earth and how well we can communicat­e with the spacecraft and satellites orbiting in space and beyond. If scientists can use the ionosphere to predict complex weather conditions in space, we can be better equipped to handle major events that might disrupt our satellites or communicat­ions grid.

On Aug. 21, Mr. Erickson and his team will be based at the MIT Haystack Observator­y in northeaste­rn Massachuse­tts, using its sensitive, cutting-edge instrument­s to study how fast the electrons go away when the sun disappears behind the moon and how quickly they return.

Calling all citizen scientists

Not all the science being done during the eclipse requires fancy equipment. Citizen science projects across the country are looking for all kinds of help from regular people in and outside the path of totality. GLOBE Observer, for instance, is a mobile app you can use to photograph clouds and record sky observatio­ns before, during and after the eclipse, which will later be compared with NASA’s own satellite images.

Google and University of California Berkeley are asking for images from all points of the eclipse path to make a high-definition, time-expanded video of the entire event, called the Eclipse Megamovie 2017. The California Academy of Sciences’ Life Responds app will allow users to contribute their observatio­ns of animals and plants during the eclipse. Contributi­ons and observatio­ns from people everywhere in the eclipse zone likely will provide an unpreceden­ted bounty of data for scientists.

If you need some motivation to contribute, remember the long-term goals of this research: Learning about the sun and its effects on our Earth tells us a lot more about the habitabili­ty of our universe. “If you want to be a space-faring society, the first thing you have to understand is: What’s the environmen­t that you’re going into, and how do you make sure that you’re safe in it, and how do you make sure that you can operate around in the way that you needto,” Mr. Erickson says.

Perhaps one day humans will be able to witness aweinspiri­ng eclipses from other planets or moons — but to get there, we’ve got to put in the work here on Earth.

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