![A total solar eclipse creates a diamond-ring effect.](https://www.uc.edu/news/articles/2024/04/n21242294/jcr:content/image.img.cq5dam.thumbnail.500.500.jpg/1712777660086.jpg)
UC Physics hits road to witness solar eclipse
The spectacle lived up to the hype for UC students and faculty
SHELBYVILLE, Ind. — Parking at Blue River Memorial Park was already scarce Monday morning when members of the Physics Department pulled into the lot about 80 miles west of the University of Cincinnati.
Families from as far away as Alabama and Florida traveled to this sprawling mix of playgrounds and ballfields because of the stellar significance of its geography. It sat in the heart of totality for the solar eclipse, promising visitors 4 minutes of complete darkness as the moon crossed in front of the sun.
A dozen UC students and faculty set up blankets, telescopes and beach chairs in the grass behind a playground. The park had a carnival atmosphere as people played with soccer balls and Frisbees and lawn games like cornhole. But the bright sun overhead in the clear, blue skies was never far from the conversation.
UC physics students and faculty peer up at the total eclipse of the sun that darkened the skies above Indiana. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
““The sun is almost exactly 400 times larger in diameter than the moon. And today the sun is 416 times farther away from us than the moon. Because it’s that farther away, the apparent size of the moon is about 4% larger than the sun,” Associate Professor Alexandre Sousa said. “And that’s why we’ll see a longer totality than in 2017, when the apparent size of the moon was only 2% larger than the sun's.”
He draped the vibrant green and red flag of his native Portugal across a chair to use as a reference marker to observe the Purkinje effect. This is the low-light transition when our eyes switch from using cones to rods for color vision to rods.
“The brain has no time to adapt to night vision so it gets confused and interprets colors in a different way,” he said. “It varies from person to person, but the reds become more muted and the greens pop out.”
He and UC Professor Philip Argyres and Associate Professor Alexandru Maries organized the field trip to give students the rare chance to witness the phenomenon. The next total solar eclipse in the United States won’t occur until 2044.
A total solar eclipse wowed students and faculty in UC's Physics Department who gathered at Blue River Memorial Park in Indiana. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
Back on UC's Uptown campus, students gathered on Bearcats Commons to watch the partial eclipse in an event sponsored by UC Campus Services Marketing. Students likewise gathered outside at UC Blue Ash.
Without fanfare, the moon began its transit, chewing a bite out of the sun like a cookie. Students used two aluminum kitchen colanders like pinhole cameras to cast dozens of eclipse shadows onto a white poster board on the ground.
“You can feel it’s getting colder,” Sousa said. “And because it’s colder in the shadow of the moon, there’s a thermal gradient that causes this wind.”
The dimming sun cast an eerie, alien light on spectators. The green grass looked more blue.
As the sky darkened, a vocal eastern meadowlark noticeably stopped singing in a nearby shortgrass prairie. All eyes turned to the sky in anticipation of the “diamond ring” effect as the moon consumed the last bit of the sun’s direct light.
UC students gather on Bearcats Commons to watch the solar eclipse. Photo/Abby Hardesty/UC Marketing + Brand
And just like that, the park was shrouded in darkness. But it wasn’t completely dark. The sun’s bright corona fired into the atmosphere beyond the fringes of the moon, casting shadows on the ground.
Sousa pointed to stars and the planets Jupiter and Venus that suddenly appeared in the daytime sky.
“Wow, this is amazing!” UC postdoctoral researcher Manuel Szewc said.
He and his partner, Maria Vercesi, were looking forward to seeing the eclipse all year.
All too soon, the sun peeked out the other side of the moon in all of its brilliant fury and the eclipse was over. But members of UC’s field trip said it lived up to the hype.
“You have the solar flares and the ‘diamond ring’ and seeing the corona of the sun, which is typically hidden from us, and the emissions of plasma — it’s really incredible,” Szewc said.
“It was mesmerizing. You forget about the science and you’re just in the moment,” Vercesi said. “It was beautiful.”
Featured image at top: A total solar eclipse darkens the skies above Indiana. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
UC Student Affairs hosted an eclipse party on Bearcats Commons. Photo/Abby Hardesty/UC Marketing + Brand
A UC student dons a pair of protective eclipse glasses on Bearcats Commons. Photo/Abby Hardesty/UC Marketing + Brand
Did you know the UC Bearcat was an astronaut? He dressed for the occasion to join students for an eclipse party on Bearcats Commons. Photo/Abby Hardesty/UC Marketing + Brand
UC students gather on Bearcats Commons to watch the eclipse. Photo/Abby Hardesty/UC Marketing + Brand
Members of UC's Department of Physics pose for a photo under an eclipse-darkened sky at a park in Shelbyville, Indiana, where they witnessed totality. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
A total solar eclipse darkens the skies above Indiana. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
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