Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Eclipse thrills crowds in California as it darkens swath of countrysid­e

- By Hannah Fry, Caroline Petrow-cohen and Jireh Deng Los Angeles Times

Nancy Castellano­s and her 5-year-old daughter, Camilla, sat on a striped picnic blanket outside the California Science Center with their eyes fixed to the sky.

Castellano­s, 39, reminded her daughter not to look up without protective eclipse glasses. It was Camilla’s first time experienci­ng the phenomenon of a solar eclipse. They waited and watched as the moon began streaking across the sun, taking a chunk out of the bright mass. In Los Angeles, at the eclipse’s peak, about 50% of the sun will be blocked.

“It’s such a memorable event, especially for the children,” Castellano­s said as Camilla cuddled in her lap. “She can remember this later on and watch the next one too.”

Millions of people across the United States collective­ly looked up at the sky Monday to witness a rare total solar eclipse. And although California didn’t experience the phenomenon of totality, there was still plenty to see.

A total solar eclipse happens when the moon passes between the sun and the Earth, completely blocking the face of the sun and casting a shadow across a wide strip of the planet below. For people in that strip, known as the path of totality, the sky will become dark as night and the temperatur­e might drop.

Outside the path of totality, people on the daylight side of the globe will experience a partial eclipse in which the moon covers a portion of the sun. In Los Angeles, this will be visible starting at 10:06 a.m.

A substantia­l blocking of the sun will be obvious by 10:39 a.m. and will peak at 11:12 a.m. By 12:22 p.m., it will be over, according to the Griffith Observator­y.

“It’s an opportunit­y to see firsthand our place in the universe,” said Paul Robertson, an associate professor of physics and astronomy at UC Irvine. “We’re sitting on the surface of this rock that’s careening through space at a speed of 30 kilometers per second, and we’re doing this sort of gravitatio­nal dance with these other giant bodies.”

During a partial solar eclipse, we can see the Earth, sun and moon “at the same time interactin­g in a way that they usually don’t,” Robertson said.

Unlike elsewhere in the country, where cloudy skies risk spoiling the view for eclipse chasers, forecaster­s are predicting a sunny, clear day in Southern California. Downtown

Los Angeles is expected to see temperatur­es in the mid-70s. The mercury could temporaril­y drop a few degrees during the actual eclipse because of the reduction in solar radiation, said Kristan Lund, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service.

Roughly a thousand people gathered on the athletic field outside the Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysi­cs at Caltech in Pasadena ahead of the eclipse. The crowd to enter the campus and grab protective eyewear was so large that it snaked at least a block along East California Boulevard.

Some families brought chairs and laid out blankets to relax and munch on snacks while they waited for the eclipse.

Ryan Rudes, a freshman at Caltech, skipped his math class to take photos of the eclipse. He created a makeshift eclipse filter for his Canon T6 camera using duct tape and lenses from his orange eclipse glasses. He had hoped to view the eclipse from Niagara Falls this year, but cloudy skies in the forecast for that part of the Northeast dashed his plans.

Don Payne, who lives near Caltech, was shocked by the size of the crowd at the school while he strolled along the campus with Bella, his 7-year-old Lakeland Terrier.

“There’s never any crowd [at Caltech] like this,” he said.

The buzz around this celestial event has been palpable, for both the scientific possibilit­ies and the rarity.

The last total solar eclipse that crossed the contiguous United States was in August 2017, according to NASA.

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