USA TODAY US Edition

SOLAR ECLIPSE IS WORTH THE HYPE

- Phi Nicholson Phil Nicholson, a Cornell University astronomy professor whose research focuses on planetary systems, has been involved in the discovery of numerous outer satellites of Uranus, Saturn and Neptune and is on NASA’s Cassini team.

Thousands of people will leave home and work to chase Monday’s solar eclipse. Tour groups are selling out; hotels are full along the path of totality. Why bother?

This eclipse doesn’t promise earth-shattering scientific discoverie­s. Despite passing over a huge swath of the country, it won’t intersect with any major solar observator­ies, such as the ones in California and New Mexico. It’s not a particular­ly long eclipse. There’s no Concorde aircraft flying along at supersonic speed, keeping up with the shadow of the moon as it passes across the Earth, as there was in 1973.

Yet this eclipse is worth the hype because of its power to inspire those who take the time to watch. It will go all the way across the country, and it’s the first eclipse to hit the lower 48 since 1979. That one only passed through Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and North Dakota. For this one, the USA has a front-row seat, as perfect as you could want. Instead of flying to Uzbekistan or Norway to see the eclipse, you can just drive down the road to Wyoming or Kentucky.

This eclipse will be seen by many more Americans than have ever seen an eclipse before. It will be spectacula­r, and the news media have lost no opportunit­y to remind the public that this is an experience not to be missed. The level of excitement is palpable and rising daily. There are even shortages of special eclipsewat­ching glasses.

Hundreds of thousands of people will witness a once-in-a-lifetime celestial event. What impact will it have on these multitudes? Hopefully, they will understand the value of scientific prediction­s. Even better, it can inspire bright young Americans to pursue careers in science — and, if we’re lucky, it can also motivate our jaded elected representa­tives to give scientific research the support it deserves.

Five decades ago, American eyes were also turned to the heavens. Then, as now, the news media offered non-stop coverage of a once-in-a-lifetime event. I remember where I was when a man first walked on the moon. If you are of an age, I bet you do, too.

The space race triggered tremendous scientific discoverie­s, but even more important it exposed people to science. It inspired countless children to dream of being engineers who built rockets and mathematic­ians who calculated trajectori­es and astronauts who conducted experiment­s while weightless.

I was one of them: The moon walk fueled my ambition to learn about science and, ultimately, become a scientist exploring the cosmos.

This solar eclipse will last only a few minutes, but those few minutes have the power to inspire. Ordinary people are learning about planetary orbits and the moon’s umbra and the sun’s corona. The news media are generating increasing excitement by including science stories at the top of the hour. Science is suddenly all the rage.

At least for a few days, the path of the eclipse means that children across the country will be seeing science in action — they can even join in as citizen scientists and contribute to more than a dozen crowd-sourced experiment­s.

We might not experience revolution­ary science or mind-bending transforma­tions, but this eclipse can and will make a difference. It will change lives. I guarantee that some of the young people watching it — with their minds open wide and wonder in their eyes — will be the scientists measuring the next eclipse that sweeps across America, in 2024.

Once-in-a-lifetime spectacle will last just a few minutes, but those minutes will have the power to inspire you

 ?? BAC TOTRONG, (BOWLING GREEN, KY.) DAILY NEWS, VIA AP ?? Demonstrat­ing what will happen during Monday’s solar eclipse in Bowling Green, Ky.
BAC TOTRONG, (BOWLING GREEN, KY.) DAILY NEWS, VIA AP Demonstrat­ing what will happen during Monday’s solar eclipse in Bowling Green, Ky.

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