Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas

Oct 14, 2023 at 11:53 am

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Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas
Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas

Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas

Protect Your Eyes! Find out how to safely watch solar eclipses here

Never look directly at the Sun without proper eye protection. You can seriously hurt your eyes, and even go blind… read more


Eclipses and Transits Visible in Waco

Show eclipses:
Eclipse Visibility From WacoVisibility Worldwide
Oct 14, 2023 Partial Solar Eclipse Annular Solar Eclipse West in Africa, North America, South America, Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic
Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas
Mar 24–25, 2024 Penumbral Lunar Eclipse Penumbral Lunar Eclipse South/West Europe, East in Asia, Much of Australia, Much of Africa, North America, South America, Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic, Antarctica
Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas
Apr 8, 2024 Total Solar Eclipse Total Solar Eclipse West in Europe, North America, North in South America, Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic
Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas
Sep 17, 2024 Partial Lunar Eclipse Partial Lunar Eclipse Europe, South/West Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Ocean, Arctic, Antarctica
Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas
Mar 13–14, 2025 Total Lunar Eclipse Total Lunar Eclipse Much of Europe, Much of Asia, Much of Australia, Much of Africa, North America, South America, Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic, Antarctica
Solar eclipse 2024 Waco, Texas

Note: Click on the date link for details in Waco, or the path map image for global details. Currently shown eclipse is highlighted.

All eclipses 1900-2199

Baylor University’s McLane Stadium will be the gathering place for thousands of viewers as well as astronomers and other scientists on April 8, 2024, for ideal viewing of the next total solar eclipse.

Tens of thousands may visit Waco on April 8, 2024, for ideal viewing of the next total solar eclipse, which astronomers predict will last around twice as long as the last one in 2017, officials said at a press event Friday.

The city of Waco will partner with the Lowell Observatory of Flagstaff, Arizona, Baylor University and Discovery Inc. to create in-person and televised events for that next eclipse of the sun in exactly two years, Waco Mayor Dillon Meek said at the event.

People who miss seeing the 2024 eclipse in Waco will not have another chance in the continental United States to see one until 2045, Lowell Observatory spokesperson Danielle Adams said.

“The sky darkened and the sun turned silvery,” Adam said, describing the last total eclipse viewing from Oregon during 2017. “Birds stopped singing and crickets started chirping.”

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Viewers saw “a dramatic diamond ring flash as the last of the sunlight disappeared.”

And then at totality, the stars came out, Adams said.

“The horizons were surrounded with sunset colors,” she said. “What was left of the sun was a (black) velvet hole in the sky with slivery tendrils of the corona glowing out from the sides.”

Totality lasted for about two minutes at that eclipse, Adams said. Her colleagues at the Lowell Observatory have predicted the next one in Waco will last longer than four minutes.

Adams said there will be safe viewing set up at McLane Stadium, and astronomers will be on hand to talk about the science.

A total eclipse can be viewed only rarely, Baylor astrophysicist Barbara Castanheira-Endl said.

“It is such an amazing coincidence that the sun and the moon both have the same angular width,” Castanheira-Endl said. That means that each appears the same size from the surface of the earth.

When the moon moves between the sun and the earth, the sun appears to be completely covered from certain points around the world, called the path of totality, she said.

If the moon’s path around the earth were not inclined 5 degrees, total eclipses would happen often, but that inclined orbit means that eclipses happen years or decades apart, Castanheira-Endl said.

Hundreds of thousands may view this rare celestial occurrence through event programming Discovery will create to bring the experience to television audiences around the world, Scott Lewers, Executive Vice President of Multiplatform Programming, Factual and Head of Content, Science, for Discovery, Inc., said in pre-recorded video for the event.

Baylor University’s McLane Stadium will be the gathering place for thousands of viewers as well as astronomers and other scientists from the Baylor faculty and the Lowell Observatory, Baylor spokesperson Jason Cook said.

“We usually say, ‘Baylor lights shine bright,’ but for this one-time-only event, darkness will allow us to shine,” Cook said.

Family travel 5: Spot a shooting star at one of these top stargazing destinations

Under African skies

Under African skies

Check into Little Kulala, a solar-powered, desert eco-retreat within southern Africa’s expansive Kulala Wilderness Reserve. Hop aboard a Land Rover to scope out springbok, ostrich and oryx, or float above the dramatic landscape, the planet’s oldest desert, in a hot air balloon. Visit the world's tallest dunes amid Namibia’s famed “sand sea.” After a dramatic day, cool off in your private plunge pool. Then, fall asleep on your rooftop Sky Bed and enjoy a late-night show where shooting stars and the Milky Way serve as headliners.

For more: https://wilderness-safaris.com; https://namibiatourism.com.na

Pixabay

Italian astronomy

Italian astronomy

For a multigenerational adventure, gather at the Sofitel Rome Villa Borghese for an evening picnic and stargazing experience. You’ll learn which constellations and other celestial bodies may have been given their names by Roman astronomers. It’s part of an extended family package that also includes horseback riding down the ancient Appian Way, a tour of the city’s top gelato spots, a gladiator school experience for the kids, as well as a yoga session for the adults. Villa Borghese, a former 19th century Roman palazzo, lies within walking distance of some of the city’s best-known cultural landmarks and parks.

For more: https://all.accor.com/hotel/1312/index.en.shtml

Pixabay

Natural Bridges National Monument, Utah

Natural Bridges National Monument, Utah

Home to some of the darkest skies in the country, this scenic landscape was the first to receive the International Dark Sky Park certification. Massive natural bridges form star-filled windows through which you can observe the skies as the Pueblo people did some 800 years ago. Among the most spectacular sights is the river of Milky Way brilliance observed rising over Owachomo Bridge.

For more: www.nps.gov/nabr/index.htm

NPS

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What time is the solar eclipse 2024 in Texas?

When Will the Eclipse Be Visible in Austin? The eclipse will be visible throughout the Hill Country from 1:32 pm - 1:41 pm CST on April 8, 2024. Austin locals and visitors will experience about 1 minute and 46 seconds of the total solar eclipse at 1:36 pm CST.

Where can I see the eclipse in 2024 in Texas?

On April 8, 2024, North America will be treated to one of the most amazing sights of a lifetime: a Total Solar Eclipse. Waco, Texas, will be right in the path of the eclipse and will offer a celestial show you won't want to miss. Set your calendars now to be at Eclipse Over Texas: Live From Waco.

Where will eclipse of 2024 be visible?

On April 8, 2024, a total solar eclipse will cross North America, passing over Mexico, United States, and Canada. On April 8, 2024, a total solar eclipse will cross North America, passing over Mexico, the United States, and Canada.

What time is the solar eclipse in Texas?

October 14, 2023 — Annular Solar Eclipse — Dallas.