Medical and Hospital News  
ECLIPSES
South Pacific Eclipse

As seen from space station Mir, the Moon's shadow sweeps across Earth during an eclipse in 1999.
by Dr. Tony Phillips
Science@NASA
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jul 12, 2010
It's every vacationer's dream: You stretch out on a white sandy beach for a luxurious nap under the South Pacific sun. The caw of distant gulls wafts across the warm sea breeze while palm fronds rustle gently overhead. You take it all in through half-closed eyes.

Could Paradise get any better? This weekend it will.

On Sunday, July 11th, the new Moon will pass directly in front of the sun, producing a total eclipse over the South Pacific. The path of totality stretches across more than a thousand miles of ocean, making landfall in the Cook Islands, Easter Island, a number of French Polynesian atolls, and the southern tip of South America.

"It's going to be a beautiful sight," says Lika Guhathakurta of NASA's Heliophysics Division in Washington DC. She herself has witnessed more than eight solar eclipses in a variety of environments from busy cities to lonely deserts to remote mountain peaks. "The South Pacific eclipse could top them all."

She imagines how the event will unfold: First, the Moon's cool shadow will sweep across the landscape, bringing a breeze of its own to compete with the sea's. Attentive observers might notice shadow bands (a well-known but mysterious corrugation of the Moon's outermost shadow) rippling across the beach as the temperature and direction of the wind shift.

The ensuing darkness will have an alien quality, not as black as genuine night, but dark enough to convince seabirds to fly to their island roosts. As their cries subside, the sounds of night creatures come to the fore, a noontime symphony of crickets and frogs.

Next comes the moment that obsesses eclipse chasers: The corona pops into view. When the Moon is dead-center in front of the sun, mesmerizing tendrils of gas spread across the sky. It is the sun's outer atmosphere on full display to the human eye.

"You can only see this while you are standing inside the shadow of the Moon," says Guhathakurta. "It is a rare and special experience."

Because the sun's atmosphere is constantly shape-shifting, every total eclipse is unique. Predicting what any given one will look like can be tricky.

Nevertheless, Guhathakurta is making a prediction. It's based on a new development in solar physics. For the first time, NASA has two spacecraft stationed on opposite sides of the sun.

"STEREO-A and STEREO-B are giving us a realtime 3D view of the solar corona, something we've never had before," she explains. "This helps forecast the appearance of the corona during an eclipse."

Inspecting images from STEREO and also from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), she predicts observers could see four ghostly-white streamers, two on either side of the sun. They will stretch out two to three degrees, forming a gossamer "X" in the sky with a black hole at the crossing point.

"I'm prepared to be wrong," she confesses. "This is the first time anyone has tried to make such a forecast using STEREO data. It will be interesting to see if it works."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
NASA's eclipse home page
Solar and Lunar Eclipses at Skynightly



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


ECLIPSES
Remote Easter Island braces for total solar eclipse
Hanga Roa, Chile (AFP) July 11, 2010
Tourists and scientists poured onto remote and mysterious Easter Island Sunday to watch a rare total eclipse of the sun, a mixed blessing for the Pacific community. An estimated 4,000 tourists, scientists, photographers, filmmakers and journalists flocked to the remote Chilean outpost of only 160 square kilometers (60 square miles), doubling the population of the barren island that already s ... read more







ECLIPSES
Six months after quake, Haitians frustrated by aid trickle

New BP cap, ships could capture all leaking oil: US

China to begin major quake reconstruction effort

US government launches new website on Gulf oil spill

ECLIPSES
New System Helps Locate Car Park Spaces

Skyhook Wireless Partners With Samsung Electronics For Leading Location System

Telogis Expands Reach Into Construction And Heavy Lifting Sectors

Global Number Of Traffic Information Users To Exceed 370 Million By 2015

ECLIPSES
Timor-Leste warms to Australia asylum idea

U.S. government challenges Ariz. law

Tibetan Adaptation To Altitude Took Less Than 3,000 Years

A Butterfly Effect In The Brain

ECLIPSES
Canada needs more, bigger parks to protect wildlife: study

Marine Scientists Return With Rare Creatures From The Deep

China to launch global search for panda keepers

The Woolly Mammoth And Saber-Toothed Cat Wipeout

ECLIPSES
Zimbabwe lacks AIDS drugs to expand treatment: official

Breakthrough antibodies neutralize most known AIDS strains

11.5 percent HIV/AIDS prevalence in Mozambique: report

WHO probe grapples with differing views on flu pandemic

ECLIPSES
China tells dissident writer book on PM could mean prison

Google says still waiting for China licence decision

Celebrations and sadness as Dalai Lama turns 75

Lenovo says Apple missing huge opportunities in China

ECLIPSES
Gunmen seize 12 sailors in ship attack off Nigeria: navy

Singapore ship with Chinese crew hijacked off Somalia

Sudan says Cyprus 'arms ship' contains mining explosives

Islamists, unpaid troops hit Somali regime

ECLIPSES
China bank lending cools in June

IMF warns of 'downside risks' in Asia

IMF raises global growth forecast despite financial shocks

G8 succeeds in accountability


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement