DÉDIÉ À L’OBSERVATION DE L'ÉCLIPSE TOTALE DU SOLEIL DU 8 AVRIL 2024 EN TOUTE SÉCURITÉ!
The eclipse is over.
We hope you enjoyed it!
 
 
Une autre ÉCLIPSE TOTALE
du soleil arrive en
Amérique du Nord!

C’est la grande éclipse nord-américaine!
...et nous souhaitons que tout le monde puisse la voir!
 
L’utilisation des informations présentes sur ce site est conditionnelle à l’accord et à la compréhension de l’énoncé suivant : je suis d’accord avec les mises en garde et je ferai preuve d’un sens commun en plus de respecter tous les protocoles établis pour la sécurité des yeux lors de l’observation de tout phénomène solaire.
 
Nouvelles:

Stories

From Bob Minor:

The July 1963 Total Solar Eclipse was also my first eclipse. I was 16, about to be a senior in High School. When plans for a friend and me to drive from California to Alaska or Canada fell through, my parents agreed to loan me the family station wagon and drive across country to Maine for the eclipse.

My father borrowed a Questar from an acquaintance and built a transistorized power supply to operate the Questar's ac motor drive. I put together a small refractor from parts from Edmund Scientific. My recollection is that the objective cost $2.98. I took black and white images with both. A family friend helped me experiment with a pyrocatechol developer for panatomic X to help get maximum dynamic range from the film.

I found a few students from UC Berkeley to share driving and expenses, and arranged to stay with family friends in NYC for a few days after the eclipse. My mother made me strap a 5 gallon gas can to the tailgate just in case we ran out of gas in the Nevada desert.

I signed up for access to Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park and with some cash and a Shell credit card borrowed from my Aunt for emergencies I was off.

The trip included:

Seems just like yesterday.

Looking forward to 2017 (three Saros cycles or one Exeligmos since 1963) when I hope to share that eclipse with many friends and family.