Jump to content

Partial solar eclipse on Tuesday morning - Now started - Peak 1113


Recommended Posts

'Partial solar eclipse set to delight UK skygazers

By Nilima Marshall

Standard website


A partial solar eclipse is set to grace skies across the UK next week as the Moon passes between the Earth and the Sun.


On Tuesday morning, skygazers across the country will be able to see nearly a sixth of the Sun being blocked out by the Moon, with those in northern Scotland expected to enjoy good views.


Dr Robert Massey, of the Royal Astronomical Society, said the phenomenon will cause the Moon to block the view of “some or all of the bright solar surface”, and the Sun will “appear to have a bite taken out of it”.


Observers in western Siberia, Russia, will get the best view of the eclipse, where the Moon will obscure a maximum of 85% of the Sun, Dr Massey added.


In London, the eclipse will begin at 10:08am on October 25, with the maximum eclipse occurring at 11.13am, when the Moon will cover close to 15% of the Sun.


Lerwick in the Shetland Isles is expected to have a better view, with 28% of the Sun obscured at mid-eclipse.


Jake Foster, astronomer at Royal Observatory Greenwich, said: “The eclipse will be visible across the whole of the UK, as well as large parts of Europe and Central and South Asia.


“The amount of obscuration you’ll see will depend on where you are on the Earth.


“Those viewing from the UK will see between 10% and 20% of the Sun covered by the Moon.”


He added: “Even though a portion of the Sun’s light will be blocked, it will not get noticeably darker in the UK during the eclipse.”


The partial eclipse will end at 11:51am.


Dr Massey said looking directly at the Sun can cause serious damage to the eyes, even when a large fraction of the solar disc is blocked out.


It is also not wise not to look at the Sun through binoculars, telescopes or a telephoto lens on an SLR camera.


He added: “The simplest way to watch an eclipse is to use a pinhole in a piece of card.


“An image of the Sun can then be projected on to another piece of card behind it (experiment with the distance between the two, but it will need to be at least 30 cm).


“Under no circumstances should you look through the pinhole.”


Dr Massey said another popular method used to view an eclipse is the mirror projection method.


He said: “You need a small, flat mirror and a means of placing it in the sun so that it reflects the sunlight into a room where you can view it on a wall or some sort of a flat screen.


“You may also have eclipse glasses with a certified safety mark, and these are available from specialist astronomy suppliers.


“Provided these are not damaged in any way, you can then view the Sun through them.”


Binoculars or telescopes can also be used to project the image of the Sun.


Dr Massey said: “Mount them on a tripod, and fit one piece of card with a hole in it over the eyepiece, and place another between 50 cm and a metre behind it.


“Point the telescope or binoculars towards the Sun and you should see its bright image on the separate card.”


For those keen to follow the event, the Royal Observatory Greenwich will live-stream the eclipse on its website and YouTube channel.'

Edited by IlonaM

If you don't have the special glasses, don't look directly at the sun!!


You can either make a pin hole camera or use collander/slatted spoon from kitchen to reflect sun onto a white surface.




A couple of ideas from the internet:


- https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/learn/project/how-to-make-a-pinhole-camera - here's a how-to for making a pin-hole camera with things you probably have at home.


- 'This one’s my favourite. Instead of making holes you use something with small, well-defined holes already—like a kitchen colander.


It will project shadows onto the floor, or on to a wall, which when close to the peak of the eclipse where you are should resemble “crescent Suns.”


You can even see them on walls, floors and even on the sides of vehicles.'


- https://www.theguardian.com/science/2022/oct/25/uk-solar-eclipse-2022-sun-moon

'Massey said another popular method used to view an eclipse is the mirror projection method. He said: “You need a small, flat mirror and a means of placing it in the sun so that it reflects the sunlight into a room where you can view it on a wall or some sort of a flat screen.

Advertisement


“You may also have eclipse glasses with a certified safety mark, and these are available from specialist astronomy suppliers. Provided these are not damaged in any way, you can then view the sun through them.”


Binoculars or telescopes can also be used to project the image of the sun. Massey said: “Mount them on a tripod, and fit one piece of card with a hole in it over the eyepiece, and place another between 50cm and a metre behind it.


“Point the telescope or binoculars towards the sun and you should see its bright image on the separate card.”


For those keen to follow the event, the Royal Observatory Greenwich will livestream the eclipse on its website and YouTube channel.'


- Live stream: https://www.rmg.co.uk/whats-on/online/solar-eclipse-october-2022-uk-live-stream

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • William, a farmer, farming with both his parents who are in their 80s, summed up the nonsensical approach the government is taking on farmers on Question Time tonight when he said: "At the point at which inheritance tax becomes due you aren't in a position to pay it without selling an income bearing asset which then destabilises the very entity you have built up to create a profit from". He summed it up beautifully when he closed: "If this policy were to persist it will materially and existentially destabilise our [the county's] farming business " The biggest clap of the programme came from the ex-NFU president who accused the government panelist: "Why aren't you going after the wealthy investors, the private equity businesses that are buying up land, planting trees, offsetting their green conscience. You've done nothing to them. They're the ones driving up land prices. These farmers do not want to sell their asset....they want to invest in it and this is going to stifle investment. Who is going to want to invest in new buildings as that is going to drive up the value of the estate." "You're going after the wrong people". It's amazing that the government have been daft enough to pick a fight with farmers - Alastair Campbell commented that he did react with shock when it was announced in the budget as, he said, you don't start a fight with farmers.
    • Surely you have fantasised about teaching people a lesson.   The potato in the exhaust is a bit of an urban myth, but here is what may happen https://carfromjapan.com/article/car-maintenance/a-potato-is-stuffed-in-a-car-exhaust-pipe/
    • rush to an all night garage and buy a uk sim, simples
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...