Solar Eclipse - November 3, 1213
From Florida Today:
Partial solar eclipse Sunday for East Coast
Doyle Rice
USA TODAY
A partial solar eclipse — one of only two this year — will be visible over much of the eastern U.S. early Sunday morning.
The eclipse will be seen for only about 30 minutes after sunrise and will appear throughout the entire East Coast where clouds don’t obscure it. It will be seen as far west as eastern Ohio, eastern Kentucky, eastern Tennessee and most of Georgia.
Sunrise Sunday morning will be at roughly 6:30a.m. or slightly later, so you’ll need to get up early to see it. But at least it will seem easier to get up early this Sunday: Daylight saving time ends Sunday at 2 a.m., so be sure to “fall back” an hour before going to bed Saturday night. That will give you at least the opportunity for an extra hour of sleep.
This eclipse will also be a rare "hybrid" eclipse, in which some parts of the Earth see an “annular” eclipse (where the moon does not completely block out the sun), while other parts see a “total” eclipse, when the moon completely covers the sun.
The U.S., along with parts of Europe and Africa, will be treated to the annular part of the eclipse: The sun will appear as if it has had a big bite taken out of it. Only people in central Africa, in countries such as Gabon, Congo, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia, will get to see the total eclipse.
The next chance to see a total solar eclipse in the U.S. will be Aug. 21, 2017.
Weather conditions will be best for eclipse viewing in the southeastern U.S., where clear skies are expected Sunday morning, according to Accu-Weather. Skies will be cloudier in the Mid-Atlantic and along the Northeast coast, while rain and even some snow showers will obstruct the sky in interior sections of the Northeast and New England.
Also, proper eye protection is needed to view this or any solar eclipse, unlike the lunar ones, according to EarthSky.org, which warns that blindness or severe eye injury is possible without protection.
"Use only glasses designed specifically for eclipse viewing or welder’s glass No. 14," said David Dickinson of Universe Today.
Copyright (c)2013 Florida Today 11/02/2013