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7:00 AM | Scientific value of the upcoming total solar eclipse

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Weather forecasting and analysis, space and historic events, climate information

7:00 AM | Scientific value of the upcoming total solar eclipse

Paul Dorian

In the mid-19th century, an early form of photography known as daguerreotype enabled Johann Julius Friedrich Berkowski to create the first photographic record of a solar eclipse, on July 28,1851.  Berkowski captured the image — the first to accurately represent the solar corona — in Königsberg in what was then the Roman Empire, now Kaliningrad in Russia. He used a small refracting telescope with a diameter of 2.4 inches (6.1 centimeters) and exposed the daguerreotype plate for 84 seconds, beginning soon after the sun was completely obscured, according to a study published in 2005 in the journal Acta Historica Astronomiae.  Source

Overview
The total solar eclipse that takes place on August 21st across parts of the US will provide an opportunity for solar scientists to learn more about the sun’s atmosphere including its outermost layer called the corona.  In addition, if there is activity on the sun during the upcoming total solar eclipse such as solar prominences or coronal mass ejections, this will provide an opportunity for first-hand observations by solar scientists.  Atmospheric scientists and meteorologists will take this opportunity to closely monitor local weather conditions in the totality zone including such parameters as air temperature and surface winds – both of which typically drop off noticeably during the short totality time period.  In addition, during a total solar eclipse, the Earth’s upper atmospheric region known as the ionosphere behaves as if it is nighttime and this event will provide an opportunity for atmospheric scientists and meteorologists (and radio enthusiasts) to learn more about the ionization which is the process by which an atom or a molecule acquires a negative or positive charge by gaining or losing electrons.  

Corona
The sun may be the Earth's closest star, but its very brightness makes it a challenge to observe. The light from the sun drowns out the fainter corona, the outer atmospheric layer of the star, a wispy region that becomes visible when the moon completely blocks the face of the sun during a total solar eclipse. Trying to understand the sun without seeing its corona would have been like trying to learn about Earth without ever seeing its atmosphere. The corona is a major part of the sun, though it is hidden from us on Earth's surface except for the glimpses we get during total solar eclipses.

The first recorded observation of the solar corona occurred during the total eclipse of Dec. 22, 968. Byzantine historian Leo Diaconus observed the event from Constantinople. In the Annales Sangallenses maiores (annals compiled in St. Gallen, Switzerland covering the years 927 through to 1059), he wrote:
"...at the fourth hour of the day ... darkness covered the Earth and all the brightest stars shone forth. And it was possible to see the disk of the sun, dull and unlit, and a dim and feeble glow like a narrow band shining in a circle around the edge of the disk."

Once of the most amazing findings about the corona is that it is much hotter than the surface of the sun itself which has puzzled scientists for many decades (nearly 3.6 million °F even though the surface of the sun is only about 11,000 °F.  It is analogous to the air around a bonfire being hotter than the bonfire itself.  Total solar eclipses provide an opportunity to view the corona and perhaps learn more about how it can get so hot. 

Solar prominences and coronal mass ejections
Total solar eclipses can provide insights into solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs), material from the sun that is spewed into space via enormous explosions. If a CME collides with Earth, the event can harm power and communication systems, as well as astronauts in space. With the sun blocked during a total solar eclipse, these clouds of charged particles could be spotted.

The first record of a CME in progress was made during the total solar eclipse of July 18, 1860. Solar prominences, the large accumulation of cooler gas held in place in the atmosphere by the sun's magnetic field, were also first recorded during a total solar eclipse. The University of Montreal's website "Great Moments in the History of Solar Physics" calls the description of the May 1, 1185, solar eclipse found in the Russian Chronicle of Novgorod "the first fairly unambiguous description of prominences."

The sun's magnetic fields drive CMEs and other forms of space weather. Although magnetic field lines can't be directly seen, the charged particles that make up the corona trace the magnetic field lines, making them visible. So rather than a diffuse gas, the corona appears to have twisting, moving jets and lines running through it. Observations of the corona can then help scientists better understand the primary drivers of the space weather that can affect Earth and missions to other worlds.

Current image of the sun with yet another spotless day...this is the 55th spotless day of 2017 as we continue to head towards the next solar minimum.  Image courtesy spaceweather.com, NASA/SDO

Helium, hydrogen and other elements
It was during a total solar eclipse that scientists discovered helium in the chromosphere region (middle of three outer layers) of the sun’s atmosphere and hydrogen atoms in the corona which had previously been thought to be too hot for hydrogen atoms to survive. In 1868, French solar physicist Jules Janssen traveled to India to observe a solar eclipse. By examining the light streaming from the sun's chromosphere, he and British astronomer Joseph Norman Lockyer independently discovered a new chemical element. He named this new find after the Greek word for sun, "helios," calling the new find "helium." Along with hydrogen, helium is one of the most abundant elements in the universe, but it wasn't spotted on Earth until 1895, marking the first time an element was discovered on the sun rather than on this planet.

Soon after the discovery of helium, American astronomer Charles Augustus Young and Scottish-born astronomer William Harkness independently discovered what they thought was another new element, which they called coronium, during the 1879 solar eclipse. According to Canada’s University of Ottawa, it took another 60 years for scientists to determine that the coronium lines were instead caused by iron at very high temperatures, suggesting that the corona reached nearly 3.6 million degrees Fahrenheit.

During the 1970 solar "eclipse of the century," NASA launched 32 suborbital sounding rockets to conduct meteorology, ionospheric and solar physics experiments. One of the most surprising discoveries came when scientists looked at the corona and spotted a wavelength of light created by hydrogen atoms. Reaching millions of degrees, the corona had previously been thought too hot for hydrogen atoms to survive. Instead, they found that hydrogen was so abundant in the corona that some of it managed to survive in atomic form. Today, scientists can create artificial eclipses with telescopes on Earth and in space by blocking the sun's light with an instrument known as a coronagraph. However, these instruments have technical limitations and cannot come close to what nature provides during an eclipse seen on the ground.

Probing Earth's own atmosphere
Total solar eclipses allow scientists to study the ionosphere in the Earth’s upper atmosphere and how sunlight impacts radio frequencies.  Ultraviolet light and X-rays from the sun can strip electrons from atoms in the Earth's upper atmosphere, in a process called ionization. Ionized particles tend to have an electric charge and one of the uppermost parts of the atmosphere, called the ionosphere, is defined by these ionized and electrically charged particles. The ionosphere requires a constant influx of X-rays and ultraviolet light to remain charged; otherwise, the atoms and electrons will recombine into neutral atoms and molecules. When the sun sets, the upper layers of the ionosphere are ionized by charged particles from space called cosmic rays. What this means is that some parts of the ionosphere — the lower parts — actively require the 'lights to be on' to exist. Hence, they are only there during daylight and disappear at night.

During the 1999 total solar eclipse that occurred over the United Kingdom, a project was organized to encourage eclipse watchers to track these changes during the eclipse.  All an observer needed was a radio. Many radio stations operate at frequencies that, during the day, are absorbed by the lower layers of the ionosphere.  At nighttime, when the number of charged particles in the lower layers drop, some of the radio waves can travel higher up into the ionosphere before they are absorbed. Instead of bouncing off the lower layers, which ultimately shortens the distance they travel, the signal can bounce off both lower and upper layers, allowing them to be transmitted across longer distances (while still being heard across short distances as well). That’s why some radio stations can be heard across great distances only at night, even though distant listeners cannot receive the station's signal during the daytime.

A total solar eclipse can act like a snapshot of night because charged particles from the sun no longer stream through the ionosphere, and as a result radio waves can bounce farther than they would during regular daytime hours. The transition from darkness to light happens faster during an eclipse than over the course of a typical sunset, and even though the sun may only be completely covered for a few minutes, the ions in the atmosphere lose their charge and reconnect during that time, making it possible for radio signals to cross long distances (just like they do during nighttime hours). The change in how far the radio signals can travel comes pretty well instantly in proportion to the loss of light and then returns to normal when the sun reappears in the sky.

Understanding the nuances of how the atmosphere is altered by the rising and setting of the sun can help radio broadcasters avoid pumping radio signals out with more power than needed, which unnecessarily pollutes radio bands far afield and creates interference. During a total solar eclipse, different parts of the United Kingdom receive different amounts of sunlight, which should also influence so the ionosphere, and hence, how far radio waves can travel. By tracking how far a known signal travels during a solar eclipse, scientists could learn about how the presence or absence of sunlight influences the different radio frequencies.

During the 1999 eclipse, this project requested that observers tune into a radio station in northern Spain that was detectable in the evenings in the United Kingdom, assuming the frequency wasn't obstructed by other local stations. Participants were asked to write down whether they could hear the station, and send in their responses along with their postcodes.
In a paper describing the project, it was stressed that the experiment was suitable for people of all ages, including the visually impaired, and didn't stop participants from viewing the eclipse. Even if local weather conditions prevented people from enjoying the eclipse by eye, rain and cloudy skies would not affect the radio waves. The project received 1,700 responses by mail, in addition to more-detailed measurements by radio amateurs, who had access to more sophisticated equipment. Wedged between the southern region that could always hear the station and a northern region that could hear it only during the eclipse, there was a stretch across the middle of England that couldn't hear the station during the eclipse. This revealed what has been called "a skip-distance effect." For the upcoming 2017 eclipse, some amateur radio clubs might be doing various experiments, and ionospheric researchers will be making special observations.

Other worlds
Total solar eclipses can reveal insights about other bodies in our solar system.
When the sun is covered during the August 21, 2017 eclipse, Mercury, Venus, Mars and Jupiter will be visible according to Earthsky.org. Venus will appear about half an hour before the sun disappears, while Mercury will be revealed from about 30 seconds before totality until about 30 seconds after it, when the moon totally covers the disk of the sun. During the 2017 eclipse, at least one set of astronomers will take the opportunity to take the temperature of Mercury while the star is hidden behind the moon.

Eclipses have also provided the opportunity to search for other worlds. In the 19th century, scientists noticed that Mercury wasn't traveling quite the way it was predicted to: the planet's closest point to the sun in its orbit slowly shifted over time, slowly moving around the star. Scientists assumed that an unseen planet, which they called Vulcan, sat between Mercury and the sun, with the unobserved planet's gravitational pull shifting Mercury's orbit. When various eclipses hid the sun, astronomers searched in vain for the missing world. During the total solar eclipse of July 29, 1878, astronomers flocked to the United States' Rocky Mountains to hunt for the hidden planet, but never found it.

It wasn't until November 1915 that a young Albert Einstein killed off Vulcan for good when he presented his theory of general relativity. A massive body can bend and distort "space-time" (Einstein's name for the fabric of reality, which weaves together three-dimensional space with time). As Mercury orbits the sun, the curvature of space caused by the sun's gravity would cause the planet's orbit to shift very slightly, Einstein's theory predicted. According to general relativity, the curvature of space-time could explain the strange wobbles of Mercury far better than a hidden planet could. 

In 1919, English astronomer Arthur Eddington traveled to the west coast of Africa to test another prediction that came from general relativity: that the path of light itself bends around a massive body. By studying how light from the stars behind the sun bent, Eddington and the eclipse provided observational evidence for Einstein's complicated theory.
While for most people, a solar eclipse can be a once-in-a-lifetime, awe-inspiring sight, it is clear that these phenomena can also reveal a wealth of information about the universe.

Local weather changes in totality regions 
Total solar eclipses allow meteorologists to study unusual weather conditions (e.g., “eclipse wind”) only seen in totality regions. Using data from several networks of sensors, weather stations, satellites, weather balloons and members of the public, scientists found that the total solar eclipse of March 20, 2016 led to changes in the wind. Also, the temperatures across the UK, where the study was conducted and between 85 per cent and 97 per cent of the sun was obscured, dropped by an average of 1.5°F (0.83°C). In some places, temperatures dropped by as much as five or six degrees. Wind speeds fell by up to 2.3 mph (2 knots) while in areas with clear skies it changed direction by as much as 20 degrees. All of these findings support the idea of what is known as an ‘eclipse wind’ and strange silences often detected during total solar eclipses. The strange silence can also be partially due to the fact that birds typically go silent as skies darken and they tend to go home to roost for the night.

Researchers also took the opportunity to assess how computer forecast models are able to predict changes in the weather during the sudden loss of sunlight.
They also found that temperature drops during the eclipse appear to vary depending on the given landscape. Temperatures fell less in coastal regions, mountainous areas and in those areas covered in vegetation.

Professor Giles Harrison, an atmospheric physicist at the University of Reading in the UK was one of the scientists involved in the studies, said “last year’s solar eclipse was essentially a chance to conduct a giant experiment with the atmosphere.  It allowed us to watch what happens to the atmosphere when there is a sudden drop in sunlight.” Together with colleague Professor Suzanne Gray, a meteorologist at the University of Reading, Professor Harrison examined data collected by Met Office weather stations and roadside weather sensors across the UK. They found that the wind change appears to be caused by variations to the ‘boundary layer’ in the atmosphere – the area of air that usually separates high-level winds from those on the ground. As temperatures dropped during the eclipse, it appears this boundary layer also fell closer to the surface, meaning the drag on the wind from the land was greater. It is similar to what occurs at sunset, but over a much shorter period of time. Professor Harrison said: This is perhaps the most complete explanation for reports of the “eclipse wind” that many people report experiencing.

‘As the sun disappears behind the moon the ground cools. This means warm air stops rising from the ground, causing a drop in wind speed and shift in its direction as the slowing of the air by the Earth’s surface changes.’  The results are published in a special edition of the world’s oldest scientific publication Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. It is published 301 years after Edmund Halley reported sensing the chill and damp that accompanied a solar eclipse in 1715 in the same journal. 

Meteorologist Paul Dorian
Vencore, Inc.
vencoreweather.com