Friday's remote solar eclipse will be on Internet

Jul 28, 2008  5:16 PM (ET)

By SETH BORENSTEIN
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20080728/D9273G680.html


WASHINGTON (AP) - A total solar eclipse will darken some of Earth's skies 
on Friday, but geography, weather, the economy and even the Olympics are 
combining to make it a hard and expensive for people to see it.

The total blotting out of the sun, which occurs when the moon's dark inner 
shadow falls on parts of the Earth, can only be seen in mostly remote 
places: the northeastern edge of Canada, the tip of Greenland, parts of 
Russia, China and Mongolia, including the famed Gobi desert. For those who 
can't be there, it will be shown live on the Internet.

Some of the areas where the eclipse will last the longest - including parts 
of the Arctic - have a 75 percent chance of bad weather that will make it 
tough to see. This eclipse at its peak will last for 2 minutes and 27 seconds.

Yet eclipse chasers can't wait for the sky to darken, animals to howl and 
people to stare in awe.

"It's so rare and unusual, it's unfortunate to pass up any chance," said 
NASA astrophysicist Fred Espenak, who has been chasing eclipses since 1970 
and has his own Mr. Eclipse Web site and a NASA solar eclipse Web site. 
Espenak will be in northern China to watch the eclipse with a tour group.

The Olympics, which start a week later in Beijing, are making it expensive 
and difficult to get plane tickets and hotel rooms, Espenak said. And the 
world's economy and fuel prices are making it even tougher, so fewer people 
are going, said Richard Fienberg, editor emeritus of Sky and Telescope 
magazine and spokesman for the American Astronomical Society.

Past eclipse tours cost around $1,000 to $2,000, but many of the China 
tours are $3,000 to $6,000, plus airfare. To join Fienberg on a Russian 
icebreaker that includes a North Pole stop costs about $23,000.

There is a a cut-rate closer to home option.

"The northeastern part of Maine will see a little bit of this eclipse right 
at sunrise," Espenak said.

And the eclipse can also be seen remotely. Museums, such as the 
Exploratorium in San Francisco, will have eclipse events. NASA, the 
Exploratorium and others will broadcast the eclipse live on the Internet. 
It reaches its peak at 7:09 a.m. EDT.

Next year's total solar eclipse - July 22, 2009 - will be more southern and 
last the longest of the 21st Century: 6 minutes, 39 seconds. But it will be 
during monsoon season and can be seen, only if the weather cooperates, in 
India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar, China and the Pacific Ocean.

---

On the Net

NASA's 2008 solar eclipse web site: 
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEmono/TSE2008/TSE2008.html


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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