The Citizen (KZN)

‘Ring of fire’ thrills

ECLIPSE: FROM AFRICA TO ASIA THIN RING OF SOLAR DISC VISIBLE

- Nairobi

Spectacle arrives on the northern hemisphere’s longest day of the year – the summer solstice.

Skywatcher­s along a narrow band from west Africa to the Arabian Peninsula, India and the Far East yesterday witnessed a dramatic “ring of fire” solar eclipse.

So-called annular eclipses occur when the Moon – passing between Earth and the Sun – is not quite close enough to our planet to completely obscure sunlight, leaving a thin ring of the solar disc visible.

They happen every year or two, and can only been seen from a narrow pathway across the planet.

Yesterday’s eclipse arrived on the northern hemisphere’s longest day of the year – the summer solstice – when Earth’s north pole is tilted most directly towards the Sun.

The “ring of fire” was first visible in northeaste­rn Republic of Congo from 5.56am local time (4.56am GMT) just a few minutes after sunrise.

This is the point of maximum duration, with the blackout lasting 1 minute and 22 seconds.

Arcing eastward across Africa and Asia, it reached “maximum eclipse” – with a perfect solar halo around the Moon – over Uttarakhan­d, India, near the Sino-Indian border at 12.10 noon local time (6.40am GMT).

More spectacula­r, but less long-lived: the exact alignment of the Earth, Moon and Sun was visible for only 38 seconds.

In Nairobi, east Africa, observers saw only a partial eclipse as clouds blocked the sky for several seconds at the exact moment the

Moon should have almost hidden the Sun. Despite some disappoint­ment Susan Murbana said: “It was very exciting because I think I’m so obsessed with eclipses.

“Today has been very kind to us in terms of the clouds. And we’ve been able to see most of it,” said Murbana, who set up the Travelling Telescope educationa­l programme with her husband Chu.

Without the coronaviru­s pandemic, they would have organised a trip to Lake Magadi in southern Kenya where the skies are generally clearer than over the capital.

“With the pandemic, we’re not able to have crowds... and get kids to look through or do stuff,” she said but still managed to share the event on social media. “We had around 50 people joining us via Zoom and then we have so many people via our Facebook live.”

The annular eclipse is visible from only about 2% of Earth’s surface, Florent Delefie, an astronomer at the Paris Observator­y, said. “It’s a bit like switching from a 500-watt to a 30-watt light bulb,” he added. “It’s a cold light and you don’t see as well.”

Animals can get spooked – birds will sometimes go back to sleep, and cows will return to the barn.

The full eclipse was visible at successive locations over a period of nearly four hours, and one of the last places to see the partially hidden Sun was Taiwan.

People hundreds of kilometres on either side of the centreline across 14 countries could also see light drain from the day but not the “ring of fire”.

Weather conditions are critical for viewing.

A solar eclipse always occurs about two weeks before or after a lunar eclipse, when the Moon moves into Earth’s shadow. Lunar eclipses are visible from about half of the Earth’s surface.

There will be a second solar eclipse on 14 December over South America. – AFP

 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? SPELLBOUND. The moon moves in front of the sun during an annular solar eclipse at the Israeli coastal city of Netanya, early yesterday.
Pictures: AFP SPELLBOUND. The moon moves in front of the sun during an annular solar eclipse at the Israeli coastal city of Netanya, early yesterday.
 ??  ?? NOW YOU SEE IT. The moon partially covers the sun during the solar eclipse in New Delhi yesterday.
NOW YOU SEE IT. The moon partially covers the sun during the solar eclipse in New Delhi yesterday.

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