Solar eclipse sequence from 21 August 2017
© Lindsay Daniels/Tandem Stills + Motio
A diamond ring around the Moon. Sequential images of a total solar eclipse
A total solar eclipse is visible today across northern Chile and Argentina. To those lucky observers in South America, this awesome event will look much as it does in our homepage image today, which is a composite of photos taken during the ‘Great American Eclipse’ of 2018.Just how does the Moon perfectly blot out the Sun? Through an amazing coincidence, the Sun is both 400 times larger than the Moon and also 400 times further away. Therefore, periodically, when the Sun, Moon and Earth are aligned just right, the Moon can perfectly obscure the Sun as seen from the surface of Earth in a total eclipse. But, unlike the Sun, the Moon is not a smooth sphere. Therefore, in the last few moments before the eclipse reaches totality, we see ‘Baily's beads’. In 1836, English astronomer Francis Baily was the first to explain that the phenomenon is created by sunlight passing between the mountains and through the canyons of the Moon. Some folks also refer to it as the diamond ring effect. But whatever you call it, it’s undeniably brilliant.