nature

2024 Eclipse, the Partial Part

2024 Eclipse, the Partial Part

The maximum of the partial eclipse was at 3:32 PM, April 8, 2024 in the Washington DC metro area. I took pictures of the partial eclipse, carefully choosing an exposure such that sun spots were also visible. I also took some fun pictures of a colander acting as many pinhole cameras projecting the eclipse.

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Kingfisher

Let’s hear a kingfisher’s bird call.

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Kingfisher

Perched, looking for a fish.

Where the river winds through its green retreat,
Smiling, rejoicing on its way,
Whose ripples and rifles ever beat
The old tree-roots and boulders gray;
Where o’er the sedges’ shallows and sands
The cat-tail tufts and river reeds,
At whose edge the patient angler stands,
The kingfisher flies and feeds.
Perch’d on a bending, wither’d spray
That leans o’er the water’s flow,
He watches intently for the prey
That swims in the stream below.
— Isaac McLellan

“Pin hole” partial eclipse viewing using found objects

"Pin holes" can be using found from boards, fingers, Venetian blinds, trees, etc. The further away, the bigger the image.

Eclipse projection from pinholes (very faint), 3/8″ holes and fingers criss-crossed.

Eclipse projection from Venetian blinds.

Eclipse projections from ~25 ft high live and ~80 ft high dead (and needle free)  Balsam pine trees in British Columbia, Canada. Man’s sandals at bottom for scale.  [Anonymous]

Pro: Size of image can be much better than with shoe box camera because distance is further. Compare images from different hole sizes. Multiple holes make fun effects.

Con: You might forget to look and find them!

View partial eclipse with pin hole camera made from shoe box

A pin hole camera made from shoe box is frequently recommended as a safe way to view a partial eclipse.

Pro: Probably couldn’t hurt you if you ate it. Can get images of surrounding wispy clouds.
Con: Image is very tiny.  Awkward to photograph. Thrown in a corner and ignored, so no photo.

But if you think bigger, much bigger, the concept can be pretty fun. See a following blog entry on found objects.