When you watch the eclipse watchout for diamonds in the skysteemCreated with Sketch.

in #photography7 years ago

The Moon isn't just some big round rock: it has mountains and valleys. And during a total solar eclipse, you can actually see the sunlight cutting a path through that lunar terrain.
As you may already know, a broad swath of the United States will turn into a giant total solar eclipse party on August 21. If you’re planning on joining in the merriment, look out for Baily’s Beads and the diamond ring effect—the last rays of sunshine before and after totality, when it all goes black.
Baily’s beads look like a string of blinding gems around the edge of the moon. The last surviving bead, set atop a ring made of the sun’s corona, forms the so-called diamond. The light show will last for less than a minute, so you’re going to want to keep your eyes on the (disappearing) ball.
Of course, the whole eclipse will be a “dramatic and truly awesome experience,” says Rick Fienberg of the American Astronomical Society. But “all the real action is in the last minutes before the moon completely covers the sun, and in the first minutes when it begins to uncover the sun.”
Baily’s beads and the diamond ring both happen because the lunar mountains are the first part of the moon to completely slide across the sun’s face. So as the moon moves between us and the sun, the mountaintops will break the sliver of blazing sunshine into a string of dazzling beads. And as the moon continues to move, you’re eventually left with one last bead, the diamond. It’ll look as if it’s set on top of the inner solar corona, the sun’s white-hot crown of plasma.
And the experience is different from year to year—it all depends on the terrain at the moon’s leading edge. Is it covered with stand-alone peaks, or a mountain range? Are the mountains steep or gently-sloped? These factors can determine how sharp and distinct the beads look.
Francis Baily, an English astronomer, first popularized the notion during the annular eclipse of 1836. Annular eclipses, unlike total eclipses, take place when the moon is further from the Earth, and therefore unable to completely block the sun. But in this 1836 eclipse, something unusual happened.
As usual, “the moon never completely covered the sun,” says Fienberg, but this time, “the matching size happened to be so close that he saw these beads of light almost all the way around. So it was quite remarkable. Instead of being this arc of sunlight, it was this ring of beads that looked like a necklace!”
Baily himself explained his experience to the Royal Astronomical Society as follows:
“When the cusps of the sun were about 40° asunder, a row of lucid points, like a string of bright beads, irregular in size and distance from each other, suddenly formed...Its formation indeed was so rapid that it presented the appearance of having been caused by the ignition of a fine train of gunpowder…the rapidity of the change was so great, and the singularity of the appearance so fascinating and attractive, that the mind was for the moment distracted, and lost in the contemplation of the scene, so as to be unable to attend to every minute occurrence.”

Francis Baily
Photographing Baily’s beads and the diamond ring
Now, you might be wondering how best to capture all this on camera.
Fienberg suggests watching for Baily’s beads before the moon covers the sun, and the diamond ring after, when the moon is uncovering the sun.
“That makes it easier to deal with your solar filters. It’s also safer because there’s no risk that you’ll take your filters off too soon,” says Feinberg. In addition to being a generally good eye-safety tip, keeping your filters on until totality means that there’s no risk of being dazzled by the sun and missing what happens next.
When the sun is completely gone, “whip your filters off and you’ll be blown away by seeing the solar corona around the jet-black disc of the Moon and the beautiful deep twilight-blue sky,” says Fienberg. “Your jaw will drop.”
But don’t forget to put the filters back on as soon as you see the diamond ring returning.

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I was luck enough to see an eclipse in the Hungarian countryside in (I believe) 2004. The locals turned it into a party and cookout. Very festive. During the total eclipse we watched without eye protection for those few minutes.

It was really eerie. The landscape darkened, but the horizon was light, the opposite of what you'd see at dusk. And the temperature noticeably dropped.

I'm not in the path of the eclipse where I live this time around. But I hope you have a good time.

Follow me if you'd like, @joe.nobel
PS I upvoted you.

Nice, more of this bro

Is it true that the moon has mountain and valleys?

What determines an eclipse?

Solar eclipse

Quite revealing piece...want to see more of your photography

Eclipse is the mixture of sun and the moon

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