You also shouldn't look at the eclipse through a camera lens, phone, binoculars or telescope, according to NASA, even while wearing eclipse glasses. The solar rays can burn through the lens and cause serious eye injury. Eclipse glasses must comply with theISO 12312-2 international safety stand...
For those using eclipse glasses or handheld viewers, make sure to put the filters in front of your eyes before looking up at the sun, not the other way around, Chou said. And children observing a solar eclipse should always be supervised to ensure they're practicing proper eye safety, he...
“Considerations in the Umbra” originally appeared at Eunoia Review Images: Full Solar Eclipse as seen from Jefferson City, Missouri, on August 21, 2017 Shared with Open Link Night #379 at dVerse ~ Poets Pub.Always in My Element February 25, 2025 / 32 Comments Always in My Element Anc...
I removed my mylar glasses, and looked up at something like nothing my experience or imagination could have come close to. I felt the scale of It All: The planet, the solar system, the universe. I felt every hair on the surface my body, and in a very similar way, my body on the ...