Categories: Web

January’s solar eclipse likely to be overcast, health warnings issued

Ireland and the UK will see their first solar eclipse of the new year on Tuesday (4th January). The partial eclipse will be visiable across the British Isles from 8:00am and will last until about 9:30am.

At its peak the moon will obscure about 66% of the sun, although the amounts will vary depending on location. The eclipse will also be visible over much of Europe, North Africa and central Asia. The Moon’s partial shadow (penumbra) will hit land at 6:40am GMT over Algeria, it will then travel across Europe passing Madrid, Paris, London, Copenhagen and then Dublin. The shadow will then track eastwards giving Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia and northwest China a sunset eclipse.

According to NASA Dublin will see the eclipse at 08:43 am GMT, in London it will be visible at 8:09 am GMT.

Enough of the sun should be blocked to lead to a darking of the morning sky, however Met Eireann and the British Met Office forecast that, as is often the case, there will be significant cloud cover during the eclipse.

In spite of any cloud cover the Royal Astronomical Society warns people not to look at the sun directly during the event.

Partial solar eclipses can be spectacular, but looking at the Sun directly (whether during an eclipse or at other times) can lead to permanent and severe eye damage and even blindness. The RAS therefore supports advice from the UK Chief Medical Officer, UK Department of Health and the Royal National Institute of Blind People that observers should NOT look directly at the Sun during this event.

Observers should also NEVER look directly at the Sun through a telescope, pair of binoculars or similar optical equipment.

The British Department of Health also advises that sunglasses will not offer adequate protection from the harmful sun’s light.

The eclipse will not obscure the view of the Quadrantid meteor shower which will peak at 1:10am on the same day over Ireland and the UK.

If you want to know when the eclipse will be visible where you live you can use NASA’s Eclipse Explorer to discover.

By entering your location and choosing the amount of the sun or moon that will be obscured and the year range the NASA web application will show you when the astronomical event will happen where you live.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Recent Posts

Bridging Traditional Venture Capital and the Masses: Democratizing Startup and Private Market Investments

Article by Luis X Barrios, CEO of Arkangeles For far too long, venture capital has…

10 hours ago

WEF scrubs ‘Valuing Nature’s Assets’ session from Sustainable Development Impact Meetings

The World Economic Forum (WEF) deletes a session entitled, "Valuing Nature's Assets," from its Sustainable…

2 days ago

Horasis India Meeting 2024: Here’s look at 10 key speakers this week in Athens

The theme of the 2024 Horasis India Meeting is cooperation, impact investing, and sustainable growth…

4 days ago

UN Summit of the Future Global Call: World leaders advocate Agenda 2030, UN reform

World leaders gather on the UN Summit of the Future Global Call to advocate for…

1 week ago

A Look Into AI and the Risks to Elections

Image via: Freepik When an entire nation devotes its attention to Vice President Kamala Harris…

1 week ago

5 ‘interconnected shifts’ are driving ‘profound systemic transformation’: Klaus Schwab, WEF report

World Economic Forum (WEF) founder Klaus Schwab says that the world is undergoing profound systemic…

1 week ago