Weather
2024 Solar Eclipse In Florida: What You Need To Know For April 8
Florida skywatchers should see about 58% totality Monday during a solar eclipse. See viewing events in the region, and the latest forecast.
FLORIDA — Excitement is building in Florida for Monday’s 2024 total solar eclipse, a celestial phenomenon that Americans won’t see again for two decades.
Only our yellow star’s spiky corona will be visible in the 15 states in the path of totality, which extends from Texas to Maine in the United States. We’ll see a less dramatic blockage of the sun in Florida with about 58 percent totality in Tampa and 46 percent in Miami as the moon slips between the sun and Earth, according to a searchable NASA map.
Below is your complete guide to viewing the sun’s disappearing act in Florida:
Find out what's happening in Tampafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
When You’ll See What
Here are the eclipse times to keep in mind on Monday (all times local):
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- Partial eclipse begins: 1:43 p.m.
- Totality begins: 2:20 p.m.
- Maximum: 3 p.m.
- Totality ends: 3:40 p.m.
- Partial ends: 4:15 p.m.
What Will The Weather Be Like?
As of Friday, the National Weather Service forecast calls for mostly clear and sunny skies on Monday with a high of 87 degrees.
What’s Happening Around The Tampa Region?
Great Explorations Children’s Museum, St. Petersburg
The museum will organize a group viewing of the eclipse at Crescent Lake Park at 2:45 p.m. After the eclipse, attendees are encouraged to explore the museum’s planetarium, which offers free entry to members that day. Non-members will pay a standard fee.
Hillsborough County Public Library Cooperative
Various libraries in the Hillsborough County Public Library Cooperative will stream the eclipse on NASA TV starting at 1:35 p.m. These include:
- Austin Davis
- Bruton Memorial
- Egypt Lake
- John F. Germany
- SouthShore
- Temple Terrace
The Arthenia L. Joyner Library will host a viewing party for children ages 6 to 12.
The 78th Street Library will also stream the movie “Dune” from 3 to 6 p.m.
James Weldon Johnson Community Library, St. Petersburg
This eclipse viewing party includes crafts and activities, such as constructing a viewer and experiments with UV beads. A limited number of eclipse glasses will be available.
Museum of Science and Industry, Tampa
There will be hands-on activities starting at 2 p.m. in the Primary Colors Amphitheater. Each ticket includes a pair of solar eclipse glasses. Cost is $18.50 per adult and $14.50 per child.
North Greenwood Library, Clearwater
The library will begin distributing eclipse-viewing glasses at 1:45 p.m.
Pier 60 Sugar Sand Festival, Clearwater
The first 2,500 people at this viewing party on Clearwater Beach will receive collectible eclipse glasses.
Pinellas County Library Cooperative
Various libraries in the Pinellas County Library Cooperative are hosting eclipse viewing parties, including:
- Safety Harbor Public Library
- Seminole Community Library
- Tarpon Springs Public Library
St. Petersburg College Planetarium at the Gibbs Campus in St. Petersburg
The SPC planetarium will host a free public viewing of the eclipse. Eclipse viewers and specially equipped telescopes will be available in the “quad” area of the St. Petersburg/Gibbs campus, near the Natural Science building, beginning at 1:30 p.m.
Be Sure To Protect Your Eyes
Except during the brief total phase of a total solar eclipse, when the sun’s face is completely obscured by the moon, it is not safe to look directly at the sun without protective eye equipment, according to NASA.
The American Astronomical Society has a list of vendors whose eclipse glasses have been certified as safe. The organization specifically warns against bargain hunting for eclipse glasses from online marketplaces such as Amazon, eBay or Temu because counterfeit glasses have infiltrated retail chains. Wherever you acquire protective eyewear, it should meet or exceed the international safety standard of ISO 12312-2:2015.
Keep this in mind, too: Viewing any part of the bright sun through a camera lens, binoculars, or a telescope without a special-purpose solar filter secured over the front of the optics will instantly cause severe eye injury.
One other safe way to view the eclipse is with a do-it-yourself pinhole projector that shows the sun on a nearby surface. The American Astronomical Society has pinhole projector DIY instructions.
A Bigger Deal Than 2017
The duration of totality in the United States will be up to 4 minutes and 24 seconds in Eagle Pass, Texas, beginning at 1:27 p.m. CDT. For comparison, the eclipse reaches totality about an hour later, at 3:29 p.m. EDT in Jackman, Maine, and lasts about 3 minutes and 26 seconds.
Totality will last twice as long as in the coast-to-coast solar eclipse in 2017, and the number of people in the path of totality — an estimated 32 million people — is much greater.
Besides Texas and Maine, states seeing totality include Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont and New Hampshire.
Eclipse Opens Scientific Window
Another thing that makes the 2024 solar eclipse markedly different from the 2017 event is that it’s occurring as the sun is at its peak activity cycle, called solar maximum. In 2017, the sun was approaching minimum. This year’s eclipse opens a unique window for scientists to study the sun’s corona.
“The eclipse that we have coming up in 2024 is going to be a very different eclipse from what we saw in 2017 because this corona that we see is going to have much more structure,” Lisa Upton, a solar scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, told Scientific American.
The violent solar storms occurring right now are responsible for auroras that dance far outside their Arctic and Antarctic ranges but also carry the potential to knock out internet satellites for months, take down power grids, and interfere with navigation satellites. Right now, these events happen with little warning, but scientists are working on their ability to predict space weather.
When Is The Next Eclipse?
It will be March 30, 2033, before another total solar eclipse touches the United States, and that’s only on the tip of Alaska. It’ll be Aug. 12, 2044, before the next eclipse sweeps across the lower 48 states, with parts of Montana and North Dakota experiencing totality.
Don’t Worry About This
Legends in ancient cultures attributed the temporary disappearance of the sun to celestial dragons and other mythical creatures, wolves and even giant frogs who either ate the sun or stole it. Among some cultures, the solar eclipse was a foreboding sign the gods were angry or that the siblings the sun and the moon were quarreling, according to timeanddate.com. In many cultures, “eclipse” means to eat.
Among the Pomo, an indigenous group of people who lived in the Northwest United States, the literal translation of “eclipse” is “got bit by a bear.” The legend is that a bear mixed it up with the sun and took a bite out of it and then decided to have a slice of the moon as well, causing a lunar eclipse.
Scientists and astronomers long ago solved the riddle of the solar eclipse — it’s simply what happens when the moon masks the sun as it passes in front of it. Still, some superstitions remain in modern culture, including that solar eclipses are dangerous for pregnant women and their unborn children, or that food cooked during an eclipse is poisonous.
In Italy, though, the superstitions aren’t as gloomy as the sky when the moon blots out the sun. Instead, the eclipse is prime flower planting time; it’s believed they will bloom brighter and more colorful than flowers planted at other times of the year. Other claims about negative effects on human behavior have been debunked by scientists.
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