with astronomer Bill Owen from JPL
Monday June 26 at 7:00 p.m.
A total eclipse of the sun is
one of Nature's most stunning experiences. The sunlight fades, the sky
grows dark, the air turns cold, and eventually the sun disappears altogether
for a few minutes. It's twilight all around the horizon, the
brighter stars are out, and the darkest spot in the sky is where the sun
is supposed to be and it's not there anymore! The whole universe
feels upside down, inside out. Is it any wonder that people through the
millennia have been in awe of such a spectacle?
On Monday, August 21, 2017, a total
eclipse of the sun will be visible in the continental United States for the
first time in almost 40 years. This total eclipse will only be visible
on a narrow track stretching across the United States from Oregon to South
Carolina. No other country will get to
see the total eclipse this time. The
rest of the United States (including Southern California) and other parts of
North and Central America will see a partial eclipse, in which the Moon
covers only a portion of the Sun.
Bill Owen is an astronomer and navigation engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He has worked on missions from Voyager to New Horizons, visiting vicariously all of the outer planets and a handful of asteroids and comets. He has traveled to total solar eclipses in Waycross GA (1970, cloudy) and San Jose del Cabo MX (1991, beautifully clear). And he hopes to go to Oregon in August.