Total Solar Eclipses
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11 Aug 1999-Paks, Hungary
26 Feb 1998-Maricaibo, Venezuela
3 Nov 94-Cecilio Baez, Paraguay
11 Jul 91-La Venta, Mexico

This photo of the 11 Aug 99 eclipse in Hungary was made more interesting by the modernistic church steeple in the city of Paks, about 60 miles south of Budapest.  City officials hosted us and wondered if I could capture the eclipse to highlight the nicely gilt sun symbol at one of the steeple's tips.
 

Mensa Bulletin cover Nov/Dec 2000

This shot also made it to the cover of a national magazine.

Totality seen from Paks, Hungary

This photo was taken using ISO 200 Kodak PKL professional emulsion Kodachrome through a 50mm lens on my 35mm Asahi Pentax screw-mount SLR.  Exposure was f/5.6 at 1/2 second.

Through my 600mm f/8 Takahashi apochromatic telescope, the view of totality from Hungary was spectacular.
Corona during totality
For this eclipse, the solar corona was amazingly uniformly distributed (compare it with the totality photos from other events) around the solar disk.  Note too, the reddish tinge around the edge of the moon; this was the glare from the sun's brilliant red chromospheric prominences intruding into the lunar disk.  These features are far brighter than the coronal details this two-second exposure was intended to capture.  The photos below, all taken at 1/1000 second, show the prominences better.  Eclipses display a range of brightness many millions of times greater than even the best film can capture but the human eye can see it all--another good reason to do whatever it takes to personally witness these awe-inspiring phenomena.
Chromospheric prominences This photo, taken at the very last moment before totality, shows the rich collection of chromospheric prominences around the solar disk during this eclipse.  Note the wonderful structure of these streams of brilliant red glowing gas at the 10, 3:30, and 7 o'clock positions.
Just like photos of the corona, these enlargements of the above image provide a rare glimpse of phenomena not visible from the Earth at any other time except during a total solar eclipse.
Prominence details Prominences, huge swirling streams of ionized hydrogen, blasted many thousands of miles from the solar surface, are often shaped and contorted by the intense magnetic fields of sunspots and other disturbances.  Some, like the one at the right, can separate completely.  This prominence extends more than 50,000 miles out into space. Prominence details
Prominence details Others were  large enough to contain the Earth (it'd easily get lost inside this huge cloud).
This eclipse, though only 2 minutes, 20 seconds long as seen from where we viewed it, proved to be one of the most spectacular I've ever seen.
The city of Paks had hosted us and, after the eclipse, officials asked us to meet with the local media.  Tibor Lovas, author of the city's web site, published a copy of one of my totality photos as well as reproduced the entire text of the newspaper article about our visit.  That and other information about Paks can be found on Tibor's official Paks page.
Also, see many more reports and photos from the 1999 eclipse on Fred Espenak's MrEclipse page.


26 February 1998 in Venezuela
Diamond Ring Diamond Fleck
"Diamond Ring" (26 Feb 98) "Diamond Fleck" (26 Feb 98)
Corona during totality
Totality (Venezuela 26 Feb 98)

The above solar eclipse images were shot through a 600mm f/8 Takahashi Calcium Fluorite refracting telescope adapted to a screw-mount 35mm Asahi Pentax camera body.

Exposure times for the "Diamond Ring" and "Diamond Fleck" images were 1/1000 sec and the totality image was captured over 2 seconds.  Film was Kodachrome Professional Emulsion transparency film with an ISO of 200.


 3 November 1994 in Paraguay
This image was shot using a 300mm Takumar f/4 telephoto lens equipped with a focal length doubler, yielding a 600mm, f/8 combination.  The camera body was the same screw-mount Asahi Pentax.

Exposure time was 2 seconds on Kodak ISO 200 print film.  Location was on the totality centerline in the village of Cecilio Baez, to the northeast of Asuncion, Paraguay.

May 1995 Mensa Bulletin Cover

American Mensa used my photo and feature article for the May 1995 issue of their national magazine.  My article focused on the excitement, adventure, and reward of traveling the world to witness total solar eclipses.


11 July 1991 in southern Mexico
Corona during totality
Totality (11 July 1991)

This image was shot using a 300mm Takumar f/4 telephoto lens equipped with a focal length doubler, yielding a 600mm, f/8 combination.  The camera body was the same screw-mount Asahi Pentax.

Exposure time was 1.5 seconds on Kodak ISO 200 color print film.  Location was 8 miles south of the totality centerline, at the edge of the little village of La Venta, southeast of the city of Tehuantepec in southern Mexico.
 

Please send any comments or questions to David Rosenthal at: n6tst--then the "at" symbol--ridgenet.net. (Note: As a result of the unavoidable nuisance now posed by spammers and their automated Web page-scanning, e-mail address-collecting software, I can no longer use the conventional name@server.com address format [humorously, that aforementioned e-mail address-collecting software will likely find my "name@server.com" address example, harvest it, and try to send spam to it. Ha!]).

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