Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadians Throw Various Viewing Events For The Partial Eclipse

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Aug, 2017 10:08 AM
    Canadians across the country will be donning special glasses and looking to the sky to take in a partial solar eclipse today.
     
    Unlike the U.S., Canada won't see a total solar eclipse, where the moon completely covers the sun, blacking out the sky and turning day into night momentarily.
     
    But Canadians are still in for a celestial show and viewing events are planned across the country, ranging from gatherings at the University of British Columbia to Irving Nature Park in Saint John, N.B.
     
    Jennifer West of the University of Toronto's Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics explains that a partial eclipse looks like a "huge bite taken out of the sun."
     

    Solar eclipse live

    LIVE: Watch the solar eclipse in Vancouver from our camera outside Science World, starting at approximately 9:10 a.m PT.

    Posted by CBC Vancouver on Monday, 21 August 2017

    Victoria is expected to get the best view of the rare celestial event, with 90 per cent of the sun blocked out above the British Columbia capital. The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada says Toronto will enjoy 70 per cent coverage, Calgary 77 per cent and Vancouver 86 per cent.
     
    No matter where Canadians take in the event, they're being cautioned to wear eclipse glasses to prevent serious eye damage.
     
    Maggie Bockus, a retired school teacher in Saint John, N.B., said she expects watching the eclipse will make her feel "humble."
     
    "You think what you are doing is so important and then you look up and see the sun and the moon," she said. "You are less than a grain of salt...against this backdrop of majesty and power."
     
    At Science World in Vancouver, a free event is being hosted on the grass outside the centre where eclipse glasses will be provided and volunteers from the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada will have solar telescopes, which have a filter that allows viewers to safely look at the sun.
     
    The eclipse is expected to begin in Vancouver at around 9:40 a.m. local time, peak at 10:20 a.m., and the shadow should pass at 11:20 a.m., said Kat Kelly, a science facilitator at the centre.
     
    "It creates a really eerie, kind of twilight effect," she said. "It can actually affect birds and animals. They find it kind of strange. Things get very quiet.  It's just a really, really beautiful sight."
     
    At the H.R. MacMillan Space Centre, Vancouver's astronomy museum, the centre's astronomer, Derek Kief, said he's looking forward to seeing night features in the daytime.
     
    "I'm hoping to be able to see Venus, definitely, but also to be able to see Mars and potentially even some of the stars," he said.
     
    But Jaymie Matthews, a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of British Columbia, was skeptical that planets would be visible in Vancouver during the eclipse.
     
    Matthews said he's looking forward to seeing people's reactions to the eclipse. The university is inviting visitors to join professors and students to observe the event with eclipse viewers and telescopes, while a live stream of the total eclipse will be presented inside the Robert H. Lee Alumni Centre.   
     
    In Toronto, the Dunlap Institute will be hosting a watching party at the Canadian National Exhibition, where about 20 astronomers will be at hand with solar telescopes and eclipse glasses.
     
    The City of Toronto is clearing its outdoor pools for half an hour during the peak of the eclipse — between 2:15 p.m. and 2:45 p.m. local time — due to low sunlight levels.
     
    Windsor, Ont., is also closing its six outdoor pools because of the eclipse. The city's aquatics manager says it's a precautionary move due to the fact swimmers would be unlikely to resist looking up at the sky, even without protective eyewear.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Figures Show Nearly 7,000 Asylum Seekers Nabbed At Quebec Border Over Six Weeks

    LACOLLE, Que. — Almost 7,000 asylum seekers have been intercepted at the Quebec-U.S. border in the last six weeks, authorities said Thursday.

    Figures Show Nearly 7,000 Asylum Seekers Nabbed At Quebec Border Over Six Weeks

    Canada On List Of Countries With Citizens Killed Or Injured In Barcelona Too

      Global Affairs says Canadians have been affected by the attacks, but did not provide further details, citing privacy reasons.

    Canada On List Of Countries With Citizens Killed Or Injured In Barcelona Too

    Investigators Release First Official Details Of 'Deadpool 2' Stuntwoman's Death

    Investigators Release First Official Details Of 'Deadpool 2' Stuntwoman's Death
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's workplace safety agency has released the first official account of a "Deadpool 2" stuntwoman's death, saying SJ Harris was thrown off a motorcycle and propelled through a plate glass window.

    Investigators Release First Official Details Of 'Deadpool 2' Stuntwoman's Death

    BC Ferries Reports Highest Passenger Traffic In Two Decades

    BC Ferries has released its first quarter results and says the numbers reveal it was a busy three months.

    BC Ferries Reports Highest Passenger Traffic In Two Decades

    Canadian Military Divers In Latvia To Clear Explosives From Past Wars

    Canadian Military Divers In Latvia To Clear Explosives From Past Wars
    Eleven Canadian Armed Forces divers and support personnel, including a contingent from CFB Esquimalt near Victoria, are working in Latvia to clear explosives from the bottom of the Baltic Sea.

    Canadian Military Divers In Latvia To Clear Explosives From Past Wars

    Chilliwack Police Bust Nets Drugs, Guns, Marijuana

    RCMP in Chilliwack say two separate busts in the Fraser Valley city last month have netted drugs, cash, guns and 4,500 pot plants.

    Chilliwack Police Bust Nets Drugs, Guns, Marijuana