Annular solar eclipse will cast shadows across South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia next week
Grab your solar viewers: The first of two solar eclipses visible over the next seven months will be next week, and the Upstate will experience part of it. The total annular solar eclipse path will begin in the US on Saturday, October 14 in Oregon at 9:13 am PDT and ends in Texas at 12:03 pm CDT. “If an eclipse path could be designed that maximizes the number of national parks in its path, this is the solution,” according to the Great American Eclipse website. Complete shadowing will occur “over Crater Lake National Park, Great Basin National Park, and others in the Four Corners region,” the website says. A partial solar eclipse will be visible across much of the rest of the US, including the Carolinas and Georgia. More news (story continues after links). Upstate student accused of voyeurism and criminal conspiracy, chief says SC man trapped under 16,000-pound piece of equipment, rescuers say Large fire at Greenville County construction site under investigation: Here’s what we know In the north of the state, the eclipse will bring about 45% obstruction of the sun. The celestial phenomenon will begin at 11:47 a.m., with the eclipse no later than 1:14 p.m. and end at 2:44 p.m. This is how the last total eclipse was seen as from Clemson’s Bowman Field on August 21, 2017. Viewing times will vary between just a few seconds to approximately one minute across our entire viewing area. Remember to wear solar eclipse glasses or goggles if you plan to view the eclipse. Read more about what glasses to wear here. The next total solar eclipse will occur on April 8, 2024 in parts of the US. The path of totality next year will go from Texas to Indiana, along the Mississippi River, to New York and exit the United States after to cross Maine. The northern part of the state is not in the path of totality, but will still see a partial eclipse of about 85% on April 8. That eclipse shadow begins at 1:50 pm with a maximum eclipse shadow of 70% at 3:09 pm and ends at 4:00 pm :24 pm By the way, the next northern total eclipse sky show state won’t occur until March 30, 2052. Here’s another look at what the last total eclipse looked like in 2017.
Grab your solar viewers: The first of two solar eclipses visible over the next seven months will be next week, and the Upstate will experience part of it.
He annular solar eclipse The path of totality begins in the US on Saturday, October 14 in Oregon at 9:13 am PDT and ends in Texas at 12:03 pm CDT.
“If an eclipse path could be designed that maximizes the number of national parks in its path, this is the solution,” according to the Great American website about Eclipse. Complete shadowing will occur “over Crater Lake National Park, Great Basin National Park, and others in the Four Corners region,” the website says.
A partial solar eclipse will be visible across much of the rest of the United States, including the Carolinas and Georgia.
More news (story continues after links).
In the north of the state, the eclipse will cause approximately 45% obstruction of the sun.
The celestial phenomenon will begin at 11:47 a.m., with the maximum eclipse at 1:14 p.m., ending at 2:44 p.m.
This is what the last total The eclipse was seen from Clemson’s Bowman Field on August 21, 2017.
Viewing times will vary from just a few seconds to approximately one minute across our entire viewing area.
Remember to wear solar eclipse glasses or goggles if you plan to view the eclipse. Read more about what glasses to wear here.
The next total solar eclipse will occur on April 8, 2024 in parts of the US.
The path of totality next year will run from Texas to Indiana, along the Mississippi River, to New York and will leave the US after crossing Maine.
The northern part of the state is not in the path of totality, but will still see a partial eclipse of about 85% on April 8.
That eclipse shadow begins at 1:50 p.m. with a maximum eclipse shadow of 70% at 3:09 p.m. and ends at 4:24 p.m.
By the way, the next total eclipse of the sky in the north of the state will not occur until March 30, 2052.
Here’s another look at what the last total eclipse looked like in 2017.
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