North America gripped by total solar eclipse frenzy

ALJAZEERA

A total solar eclipse will have millions of people across North America gazing towards the heavens on Monday as the moon completely blocks the sun for more than four minutes in some areas.

The eclipse will be visible, weather permitting, along a path starting in Mexico and then crossing through the United States and into Canada on Monday.

Eclipse fans are gathering in places along the “path of totality”, including the city of Fredericksburg in central Texas, where the total eclipse will occur shortly after 1:30pm (18:30 GMT).

That is where Michael Zeiler, a veteran eclipse chaser from New Mexico who has already witnessed 11 total eclipses across the globe, plans to be.

“First-time viewers of a total eclipse will be gobsmacked by the sight,” Zeiler said. “It will be a peak life experience.”

At up to 4 minutes and 28 seconds, this one will last longer than the total eclipse that streaked across parts of the US in 2017, which clocked in at up to 2 minutes and 42 seconds.

Al Jazeera’s Colin Baker said the four-minute eclipse will be a “data gathering bonanza” for researchers.

“Six hundred high-altitude balloons will be released. A 4km-long kite will point a measuring instrument at the sun. Rockets will launch from an island in Virginia, and jets will take off to fly inside the path of totality – noses open, cameras on,” Baker added.

“With better tools, more smartphones and more research centres under its path, more data will likely be gathered during this total solar eclipse than ever before.”

According to NASA, total eclipses can last anywhere from 10 seconds to about seven-and-a-half minutes.

Leave a Reply

Avatar

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *