Tag: eclipse

  • Why unprotected eclipse gazing will leave you seeing stars

    Why unprotected eclipse gazing will leave you seeing stars

    Just a single, unguarded glance at a solar eclipse can result in a lifetime of vision loss, eye health experts warn.

    On Monday, tens of millions of spectators across Mexico, the United States and Canada will witness the Moon completely obscure the Sun’s light, a rare celestial spectacle that won’t be visible for most of North America again until 2044.

    Medical literature is teeming with examples of people who suffered damage to their retinas — the layer of light-sensitive tissue at the back of the eye — and health professionals are offering advice on how to avoid becoming the next cautionary tale.

    Aaron Zimmerman, a clinical professor of optometry at the Ohio State University, told AFP that the dangers of sungazing during eclipses were discussed by the ancient Greek philosopher Socrates, but it wasn’t until recently that science really caught up with how eye injury happened.

    When it comes to eclipses, he explained, the main damage comes from “photochemical toxicity,” where short, high-energy wavelengths of light — blues, violets and non-visible ultraviolets — trigger chemical reactions that damage the rods and cones of the retina.

    Cue visits to the emergency department by people with complaints of blurry vision, changes in color perception, and blind spots, with the outlook for recovery far from certain.

    Human beings inherently look away from the Sun because of the discomfort it causes, but during eclipses “you can psychologically override” that instinct, explained Zimmerman.

    A famous journal report about the 2017 US solar eclipse involved a woman in her twenties who presented to the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary after looking at the solar rim “several times for approximately 6 seconds without protective glasses” and then later with eclipse glasses.

    Hours later, objects started to look fuzzy and out of shape, colors became distorted, and she developed a central black spot in her left eye.

    An advanced imaging technique was able to show the damage at the cellular level which persisted on her follow up six weeks later.

    Young adults might be more susceptible, the authors of the paper said, because of larger pupils, clearer eye structure, or “poorer recognition of the dangers” of viewing eclipses with improper eyewear.

    “In some cases, it’s just partially damaged and it may resolve so that you don’t notice it anymore,” Neil Bressler, a professor of ophthalmology at Johns Hopkins University and editor-in-chief of JAMA Ophthalmology told AFP. If recovery happens, it’s normally within the first six months.

    “But in other cases, it can leave a permanent blank spot… and we don’t have a treatment to reverse that. It’s like brain tissue, once you lose it, it won’t grow back,” added Bressler.

    The best way to view the eclipse is with eclipse sunglasses, which block out 99.999 percent of light. Always go for genuine products. To test if your glasses are up to standard, “find the brightest light bulb in your home — and then look at that from up close and you should barely be able to see the light,” said Zimmerman.

    If it’s too late to procure specialist eyewear, then there are indirect methods, such as punching a pinhole into a cardboard and letting the light shine onto another surface, or even using the humble kitchen colander to the same effect. NASA’s webcast is another option.

    Those fortunate enough to be in the “path of totality,” under which the Moon will fully block out the Sun, can look up without glasses and admire the Sun’s outer atmosphere, or corona, glowing from behind the silhouette of the Moon.

    But, said Bressler, the danger is not having protection before and after those precious moments, which can last anywhere from seconds to a few minutes, depending on your location.

    “You must know when it begins and use protection before that, and you may be enamored by looking at all this, but you must have some alarm to tell you it’s about to end,” he warned.

  • Egg-standing test goes viral as eclipse crosses Asia

    Egg-standing test goes viral as eclipse crosses Asia

    According to a popular scientific theory, an egg will support itself that way when the moon obscures the sun and during the spring equinox, due to increased gravity.

    While the theory has been debunked, Reuters reported that this did not stop Malaysian and Indonesian social media users from putting it to the test on Thursday, as thousands of sky watchers gathered across parts of Asia to witness a rare annular solar eclipse.

    Videos shared online showed dozens of users succeeding in getting eggs to balance on different surfaces including on gravel, a window pane, and a plate during the ‘ring-of-fire’ eclipse.

    IN PICTURES: ‘Ring of Fire’ eclipse enthralls observers in Asia

    However, Dr Chong Hon Yew, a retired physicist from the Malaysian Science University, said there was no evidence to back up the theory.

    “You can do the same experiment tomorrow, before or after eclipse – it’s easy to do it,” Chong said. “But it’s a fun trick to do (during an eclipse) to get young kids interested in science and astronomy.”

    Thursday’s annular eclipse – which occurs when the moon covers the sun’s center but leaves its outer edges visible to form a ring – was also visible in Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

    In most years, two solar eclipses are visible from somewhere on Earth. The maximum number per year is five.

  • IN PICTURES: ‘Ring of Fire’ eclipse enthralls observers in Asia

    IN PICTURES: ‘Ring of Fire’ eclipse enthralls observers in Asia

    Skywatchers from Saudi Arabia and Oman to Pakistan and Singapore were treated to a rare “ring of fire” solar eclipse on Thursday.

    Annular eclipses occur when the Moon is not close enough to the Earth to completely obscure the Sun, leaving a thin ring of the solar disc visible.

    While these types of eclipses occur every year or two, they are only visible from a narrow band of Earth each time and it can be decades before the same pattern is repeated.

    Depending on weather conditions, this year’s astronomical phenomenon was set to be visible from the Middle East across southern India and Southeast Asia before ending over the northern Pacific.

    Hundreds of amateur astronomers, photographers and set up by Singapore’s harbour for what some described as a “once in a lifetime” event.

    Bahrain
    Dindigul in Tamil Nadu, India
    Bangkok, Thailand
    Sanaa, Yemen
    Bangkok, Thailand

    Meanwhile, in Pakistan due to the dense fog, smog and cloudy skies, the eclipse wasn’t very visible.

    The next annual eclipse in June 2020 will be visible to a narrow band from Africa to northern Asia.

    The following one in June 2021 will only be seen in the Arctic and parts of Canada, Greenland and the remote Russian far east.

  • Astrologers blame Pakistan’s woes on eclipse

    Astrologers blame Pakistan’s woes on eclipse

    As Pakistan prepares to witness a magnificent annular solar eclipse, after almost 20 years, astrologers are of the view that the eclipse has brought with it plenty of problems for the country. The last annular solar eclipse was witnessed back in 1999.

    The annular solar eclipse is also called the ‘Ring of Fire’ because only the boundaries of the sun will be observable from behind the moon.

    According to a report in The Express Tribune, astrologists say the eclipse’s negative effects are experienced 15 days before and after the event. The eclipse affects both domestic and societal lives.

    Astrology expert Sayed Musaddiq Zanjani said that “the eclipse even has effects on newborns, and pregnant women must stay inside their homes while it takes place, so as to stay safe.”

    Zanjani also claimed that the worsening situation in Pakistan was due to the eclipse and that the PIC tragedy in Lahore and the death penalty awarded to former military dictator Pervez Musharraf were all caused due to the eclipse.

    Read more: Here’s when and how you can observe rare solar eclipse

    Meanwhile, scientists and religious scholars have struck down the superstition.

    A religious scholar said that “the Sun and Moon are signs of Allah and that eclipses can do no harm to humans.”

    According to Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD), the annular solar eclipse will begin at 7:00 AM on December 26 and will end at 1:00 PM and will be visible in Karachi, Quetta, Lahore, Islamabad, Peshawar, and Gilgit.