One month today, EEPS views of Texas' own 'Ring of Fire'

CTLee annular eclipse ring of fire
Compound image of Annular Eclipse by Linda Welzenbach
Timelapse of annular eclipse near Yorktown, TX, October 14, 2023.  Graphic and Images: L. Welzenbach

For geologists, ‘Ring of Fire’ immediately brings to mind the predominant ring of earthquakes and volcanos that border the pacific plate. On October 14, 2023, Texas was the center of its own, if very brief, ‘Ring of Fire’.  The totality of an annular eclipse. 

Area over the western US covered by the shadow of the moon with location of EEPS images
Area over the western US covered by the eclipse with location of images from EEPS faculty, students and staff.  Graphic: L. Welzenbach

In spite of what we know about the origins of the phenomena, there is still a visceral heart skipping moment at totality, when the birds and insects become silent in the unexpected twilight.  

80% coverage, annular eclipse projection on a sidewalk in Houston.  Image: Aindrilla Pal
80% coverage eclipse projection through a tree on a sidewalk in Houston.  Image: Aindrila Pal

Eclipse viewing today can be as simple as observing a projection indirectly on the ground through a tree’s leafy canopy, or in a more controlled construct with a pinhole projector, to capturing still images directly through filtered telephoto lenses on our DSLR’s.

What is an Annular Eclipse?

Annular refers to the region or ‘ring’ between two circles, in this case the sun and the moon, whereby the moon is at its farthest from the earth, and thus cannot completely block the fullness of the sun’s disc of light as it passes in front, thus producing a ‘Ring of Fire’.

 

Rice Space Institute graphic of annular eclipse
Rice Space Institute graphic of annular eclipse

 

Below, our EEPS community share their experiences through images of this unusual event, the fourth since 1851, that will not revisit Texas until 2056.

 

EEPS Earth and Planetary materials course field trip, led by faculty Cin-Ty Lee and Rajdeep Dasgupta, took undergraduates into the path of totality which ran through Albuquerque, NM.  Cin-Ty Lee captured these amazing images...

EEPS 332 class with eclipse viewing glasses in Albuquerque, NM
EEPS 332 class viewing the eclipse through glasses in Albuquerque, NM.  Image: CT Lee
Ring of Fire, Albuquerque, NM by Cin-Ty Lee
The 'Ring of Fire', Albuquerque, NM. Image: Cin-Ty Lee
Full ring through leaf canopy, Albuquerque, NM, Cin-Ty Lee
Full ring through leaf canopy, Albuquerque, NM.  Image: Cin-Ty Lee

 


 

Aindrila Pal's creative image of 80% coverage from Houston, TX
Aindrila Pal's creative image of 80% coverage, Houston, TX

 

EEPS graduate student Aindrila Pal was in Houston during the event.  She enjoyed viewing the eclipse in a variety of ways, with one of the more unusual approaches, using her phone as a telescope to create this image titled, "I 'C' You.'

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Waxing crescent eclipse with iphone through telescope eye piece.  G. Costin
Waxing crescent eclipse taken with iPhone through the telescope eye piece.  Image: Gelu Costin

 

 

Gabi Costin chose the classic approach, viewing through an astronomy telescope, living in the moment, but managing to snap a quick shot through the eyepiece with his phone.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


A thousand crescents, Duncan Keller, Houston TX
A thousand crescents, Houston TX.  Image: Duncan Keller

 

 

 

EEPS postdoctoral fellow Duncan Keller was also at home in Houston, and captured thousands of eclipses created by the beautiful live oaks that shade our city.  As with all good scientific imaging practice, he provided his hand for scale.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Eclipse reflected off face of iphone onto towel
Image of the eclipse reflected off the face of an iphone onto towel, Yorktown, TX.  Image: Linda Welzenbach

Linda Welzenbach Fries, EEPS science writer, journeyed to Corpus Christi in the hopes of capturing the eclipse over the gulf.  Waking to the howling winds of a cold front and clouds associated with the rising sun, she took the chance that a few miles north to Goliad might put her beyond the leading edge of the front into clearing.  A stubbornly stuck frontal boundary saw clouds continue to build northward, and so she made the painful decision to continue further north, stopping just the nick of time to view totality in the parking lot of a school in Yorktown, TX.  

 

 

 

For more information about this event and the upcoming total Eclipse to take place in Texas on 8 April 2024, visit the website ‘The Great American Eclipse’.

 

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