The solar eclipse, Bearcat-style: Science, fun and a whole lot of clouds
Campus community turns out to witness once-in-a-generation event
When the veil of cloud briefly parted above Science II, the gathering crowd of onlookers was ready.
鈥淕lasses up!鈥 shouted Mark Stephens, an instructional support specialist with the Physics Department, which organized the event in the courtyard. 鈥淭he moon鈥檚 taking a bite!鈥
The parting of the clouds only happened a handful of times, as the shadow overtook the sun on April 8. But that didn鈥檛 dim the enthusiasm of the 黑料视频 campus, which turned out en masse to turn spectacled faces to the increasingly gloomy sky. A store of free eclipse glasses ran out.
Hours before the astronomical event began, Midas Leung was stationed outside the University Union, aligning a pair of devices. One was a telescope borrowed from the Physics Club, the other his personal camera with a long lens. Both were outfitted with black polymer filters to reduce the amount of light to safe levels.
鈥淚鈥檓 excited but saddened by the fact that it鈥檚 cloudy,鈥 said the junior, an applied physics major.
Sophomore Cheryl Attard and senior Adella Cho found an early spot on the Quad 鈥 a good thing, too, since the campus green space soon became clogged with hopeful viewers. Cho, a sociology and accounting major, remembered the 2017 experience and was curious about how this one would unfold.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been a bit disappointed,鈥 admitted Attard, a political science major, as she glanced up at the thickening clouds.
Outside Science II
Solar eclipses are pretty neat, noted first-year physics major Ian Battaglia, a member of the campus鈥 Astronomy Club who stopped by the gathering outside Science II.
鈥淵ou have the sun and the Earth, and the moon is sandwiched in the middle. At its greatest extent, the moon completely covers the sun,鈥 he explained. 鈥淭here are interesting physical ways that it affects the Earth.鈥
For one, the temperature drops, and the wind often dies down. Perhaps ironically, clouds often form once the temperature drops near the eclipse鈥檚 peak, Stephens noted.
According to NASA, the phenomenon also allows scientists to study the innermost part of the sun鈥檚 corona, as well as the sun鈥檚 impact on Earth鈥檚 ionosphere. The fact that we have eclipses at all is an amazing coincidence: the sun is 400 times larger than the moon, but it鈥檚 also around 400 times further away, Stephens noted.
At the Physics gathering, Stephens set up a device known as a sun-spotter. Light comes in an aperture, reflecting off several mirrors until it鈥檚 projected onto a piece of paper inside. The device is used to chart sun spots; their shifting position can be used to figure out the speed of the sun鈥檚 rotation, he explained.
Except, unfortunately, there was no sun to spot 鈥 as graduate assistant Mabrur Ahmed discovered as he set up an 18-inch telescope. A doctoral student in physics, Ahmed doesn鈥檛 usually dabble with celestial bodies; 鈥淢y expertise is in the small stuff,鈥 he explained.
鈥淒id you get it, Mabrur?鈥 Stephens asked after one brief spot of light.
鈥淚 had it, then I lost it,鈥 Ahmed sighed.
On the Quad
Not only students but also faculty and staff turned out for Binghamton鈥檚 eclipse-watching extravaganza.
Dominick Chiuchiolo happened to attend a campus tour with his son, a prospective Binghamton student. The Long Island photographer set up cameras with filters and long lenses in the grassy amphitheater, located on the other side of the Harpur College plinth. His ideal shot: the slivered sun, with the students, the Pegasus and the Library Tower in the background, he said.
鈥淚 always have my gear with me,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is pretty cool, right?鈥
As the sky clouded and darkened, the Quad transformed into a mini-eclipse festival. A quartet of African drummers accompanied Associate Professor of Music and Africana Studies James Salinas Burns in front of the Fine Arts Building, providing a lively soundtrack. Other students hit volleyballs and chatted with friends as the clouds rolled in; one even took the opportunity to climb a tree.
Binghamton wasn鈥檛 in the path of totality; at its peak, a shadow covered 97% of the sun. Still, the temperature dropped, and twilight fell, giving the campus a 6 p.m. vibe.
A cheer rose from the Quad throng as the sun briefly broke free from the clouds, all but a bright crescent occulted. Then, the veil closed again and thickened.
At 3:23 p.m., the height of the eclipse, another cheer went up. A lone vulture wheeled high overhead, as staffers in the nearby Couper Administration Building lined the windows, gazing toward the University Union 鈥 where the dimming sun should have appeared.
鈥淚 just wanted to see it,鈥 said first-year student Mia Colangelo, an English and philosophy, politics and law major.