The 2017 Total Solar Eclipse

🌞 🌚 🌎 😎

The Sun, the Moon, and the Earth lined up on August 21st, 2017. We did our best to be lined up too. We traveled to St. Joseph, MO to be along the center-line of the swath of totality that crossed the United States.

The back-dated posts below detail the running log of our preparations and journey that I had incrementally posted to Facebook in the summer of 2017.

There are a few things to note before we start. At first, I did not know if we would be able leave town to see the total eclipse. My wife and I were both looking for work and money was a concern. I might be satisfied with just viewing the partial eclipse from Austin, TX, so at first started getting ready for the partial here in Austin. I wanted to use equipment that I already had, with a minimum of extra expenditure. We also had a probable summer trip to see relatives near Wichita, KS in the back of our minds. Eventually we combined that trip with an extra jaunt to the north to put us on the centerline.

Good morning, ordinary people!

As the rest of the world does their morning routine…

I’m pondering what everyone else is doing this beautiful Thursday morning. The eclipsolunatic is poring through all the checklists he’s been building these last few months.

Yes, I’m packing for departure to-mor-row mor-ning! But first, I’m starting off with a cup of Joe in my spiffy new mug.

The ordinary people idea is a nod to character Sheldon Cooper’s visit to the grocery store:

Sheldon: This is great. Look at me, out in the real world of ordinary people, just living their ordinary, colorless, workaday lives.

Penny: Thank you.

Sheldon: No, thank you. And thank you, ordinary person.

“The Luminous Fish Effect”, S1E4, The Big Bang Theory

One of these days I’ll drone on about my frustration with the show making fun of scientists and engineers, but today I’ve got a lot of things to do.

Eclipse Science and Safety

Yesterday, our Cub Scout pack turned out a week in advance of the solar eclipse to learn about science and safety. We also worked on requirements for their 2017 eclipse patch.

BSA Solar Eclipse Patch

The lesson was structured as a “reverse quiz”. The attendees asked canned questions found on randomly drawn slips of paper. Our eccentric instructor answered as best he could. I think he might have been sneaking peeks at his notes. Nobody can keep that much eclipse info in their head at once.

These pictures were frame captures from video taken by the scouts.

These binocular solar filters have been given “professional” facings.
Looking for sunspots.
One scout’s design adds extra solar shielding from a box making it cooler and removing some internal reflections on the inside of the glasses.
Looking for sunspots.
Demonstrating a pinhole box viewer.
Demonstrating an pinhole box viewer made from paper tubes.
What it looks like during totality.
Who will be able to see the eclipse on August 21st?
What is the pinhole effect?
Put on your solar helmet, Box Man!
What is the diamond ring effect?
There’s a DIY solar filter made from the Silver-Black polymer film from Thousand Oaks Optical on the front end of the telescope.
Hopefully the number answering yes will increase this year.
Checking out the sunspots.
There’s still a sliver! Approaching totality in this video from 1991.
Get ready to try something like this during the eclipse!

I used holes from a push pin. You might try something bigger. Maybe a bunch of different sizes to see what works best

Exposure and Tracking for a Total Solar Eclipse

They say you should use the full moon to get your initial exposure settings for the totality phase of a solar eclipse. I guess the settings for my setup will be like the ones I used on this picture from last night.

1/100s and 100 ISO
Nikon D7100 on the back of a Celestron 90GT 910mm Telescope

The video tests were similar. I liked 1080p30, 1/125s, and 100 ISO.

We’ve been having a lot of rain, clouds, and haze lately. Last night was my best night for the full moon trials. Today, I moved on with the sun trials.

1/125s at ISO 100
Nikon D7100 on the back of a Celestron 90GT 910mm Telescope
Thousand Oaks Optical Silver-Black Polymer Filter

Wow. How boring is this? One teeny sunspot? Hmm.. I’m not getting great focus today. Moist atmosphere I think. I did get rid of the light leak by covering the viewfinder. The contrast is great! I also worked to shield the monitor so I could focus without glare in the daylight.

Getting things in focus. Well, technically, I’m centering.

My son took that one. There’s an HDMI port on the camera. I ran it to a 24″ monitor and put that in a box with a black cloth hood. Works for my old eyes.

The monitor in the box

There’s a reticle taped to the frame of the monitor. It helps me keep the sun/moon image centered when there is drift in the tracking. When I see error, I can adjust with the slewing controls on the telescope. The image is a composite of several reticle types I found on the internet. I wanted concentric circles, a cross in the center and a ring with degrees for noting the position of sunspots. I used a similar reticle for the July 11, 1991 eclipse.

Closeup of the reticle. Remember making overhead projector transparencies for presentations? That was before PowerPoint and cheap video projectors. This is pretty much one of those. Who still has the plastic? I didn’t. 5 sheets for $6 on Amazon! This time I used my inkjet printer to add the text and lines. Last time I copied the reticle from a book onto the transparency sheet using the copier at work.

Sorry dear, I think he’s been infected

My son demonstrating his own solar apparatus

Well, it was bound to happen. He’s been watching me build solar contraptions for quite a while now, and he had his own idea. The idea was to block out as much extraneous light as possible by making a sort of helmet with eclipse goggles to filter the sun. The BM stands for Box Man. You know I’m proud!

How about this one:

Another eclipse viewer

It’s an indirect eclipse viewer: our own collaborative design. We started with ideas gleaned from a Boy’s Life article. There’s a pinhole in aluminum foil at the top of a stack of two paper towel tubes. That puts a ¼” image onto white cardboard at the bottom of this half oatmeal container. The eyepiece is a toilet paper tube pointed at the image. He built it and tested it with some guidance. You aim it by minimizing the shadow of the tall tube on the oatmeal box end.

DIY Solar Filters for Binoculars

What’s going on in this picture?

Selfie showing the DIY filters I made for my binoculars. Of course I can’t see anything dimmer than the Sun though them. 🙂 I used the same construction technique as I did for the telescope filters. The cool eclipse mirror is the one that hangs in the art niche in our hallway.

When I showed these filters to my dear son, he commented that he didn’t think they looked very professional. At that moment I had a very “professional” idea…

8/5/17 Update

Some “Sun Shades” for the binocular eclipse filters!

When you are facing the sun for long periods of time, you might benefit from an extra bit of shade. Hence, the shielding disks I added. As I manipulated the binoculars to adjust for eye distance, I realized the disks were kind of “eclipsey”, so I decided to put sun and moon images on them. Well, that simply wasn’t enough drama, so I added faces. The sunglasses idea just tries to bring some sanity back to the whole thing. Totally professional! I can not wait until I whip these out in public! I might need a piece of white “tape” to hide that crack between the glasses halves.

Astrophotography with a 90GT and D7100

These are the first night-time shots with the D7100. They are looking pretty good! The pictures shown here are cropped from the full frame, but not altered or re-sized.

The Moon

7/27/2017 21:11CDT, D7100+90GT, 1/50s, ISO640

I got back to experimenting with the camera on the telescope. Object tracking is much improved now that I have precisely leveled the tripod with a round spirit level before adding the tracking mount. Here I’ve put the Nikon D7100 on a T-ring in line with, and at the end of, the Celestron 90GT telescope without an eyepiece. I’m getting a 2000 pixel moon image, and that’s good enough for stills in 4K video. Focusing is much easier at night, but it’s still difficult. I plugged an HDMI cable into the camera and hooked it to a computer monitor. The big screen helps my old eyes, but it’s still the same number of pixels being displayed as on the back of the camera. The exposure is not the same when the photo taken vs. setting up the shot. During set up, the camera seems to use a lower shutter speed causing the image to be blown out with highs and it that makes it hard to focus. The shot taken on release comes out much clearer due to the higher shutter speed. If I can get manual control of the set up shutter speed, I can focus better. Camera shake due to wind is still a problem. I’ve added a sandbag suspended under the tripod legs to weigh the telescope tripod down. The bag swings slightly in the breeze but at least it’s not so much of the high frequency shake I was getting before. I might be able to dampen that some by making the bag just touch the ground

I might want a higher ISO to get more depth for the corona during totality, but this seems best for this shot.

Jupiter

7/27/2017 21:24CDT, D7100+90GT, 1/125s, ISO1000

I tried Jupiter using the same setup as the moon shot. We could see two or three of Jupiter’s moons when we used the eyepiece, but I don’t see them here. I used a higher ISO and shutter speed to help freeze the shaking image.

Saturn

7/27/2017 21:28CDT, D7100+90GT, 1/60s, ISO640

The wind died down some, so I could go slower for more color.

What the heck is an eclipsolunatic?

Yep, that’s one right there

Definition

e·clip·so·lu·na·tic (i-ˈklip-sō-lü-nə-tik) n. Person obsessed with eclipses to the point of insanity – but not quite, as they can probably quit any time. syn: ECLIPSE CRAZY

Identifying the eclipsolunatic in the wild

One easily visible sign is that his hat may be on backwards. Not for lunatic style, but because it interferes with viewfinder work. Another telltale sign is wide open bug eyes. His eyes may be glazed, red, or downright smoking if he forgot to put the safety filter on. Retinal ghosting may have him stumbling around like a drunken fool. He might be a little crazy from the heat and/or “eclipse time crunch” stress. WARNING: Stay well clear of this fellow.

The E-word

As far as I know, the six sylable frankenword eclipsolunatic didn’t exist on the internet before I smashed all the terms together: eclipse, Sol, Luna, lunatic. I did a google search in 2012 and didn’t see one hit. Proof! 😉

That word again came to mind after I had my son take this picture:

I’m … man

Ellipsis Man? Nope, not the series of dots representing an omission. Something else, I just didn’t know what to put there. Where? In the caption? No, right here on my chest! I knew I wanted a new eclipse t-shirt to wear for the coming eclipse, and I thought I’d better figure something out. Yeah, something I could subject the whole family to. What was it? Dangling Preposition Man? No! Keep it together … Man, and stop talking to yourself. OK, OK, you don’t have to be so critical of you.

OK, so let’s take one tiny step back because I know you have questions. And it’s not just questions about sanity. Your real question is: “What is that cape thing in the photo and why would you put that photo out in a public place?” [Nailed it didn’t I?]

Well,

It’s not a cape!

What, again? Another embarrassing picture?

So it looks like a cape, but it’s really something to use as sun shade at the solar telescope. I was really wanting something that’s white on one side and black on the other. The idea is to keep the sun’s rays out and the dark in. The sun had been frying me while viewing and I think it was cooking my brain. I needed some shady relief. The covers they sell for telescopes are pretty expensive. I found this inexpensive silver waterproof barber cape online. It works well draped over a black layer of muslin. Maybe you are looking for a solution yourself? There it is, and that’s my story.

Oh wait, so it actually is a cape then? Yes, yes, but we can restrain our self right? Uh, apparently, not. Dun, dun, da, DUUN!

I did press on to make the logo and the shirt. I never did go back and ask my sidekick to re-take the pictures in the shirt with the, ahem, telescope cover.

Are you an eclipsolunatic too?

I do have some stuff for you to peruse at the Eclipsolunatic Emporium.

DIY Solar Aiming Gizmo

After seeing something similar on line, I built this gizmo out of 1/2″ PVC pipe and cable ties. It should help me align to the Sun by maximizing the bright spot in the middle of the shadow. The bottom tubes keep the top tube aligned with the scope tube.

Better than the toilet paper tube idea
Zip-tie construction
Zip-ties in place
Use an index card to check the aim
It needs to stick out beyond the filter