The Prague Post - Totality ready: US braces for April 8 solar eclipse frenzy

EUR -
AED 4.125022
AFN 78.877894
ALL 97.636284
AMD 437.153444
ANG 2.02409
AOA 1027.60546
ARS 1249.38303
AUD 1.755644
AWG 2.024326
AZN 1.911897
BAM 1.943884
BBD 2.265305
BDT 136.3099
BGN 1.956151
BHD 0.423323
BIF 3337.604386
BMD 1.123066
BND 1.454754
BOB 7.752581
BRL 6.35824
BSD 1.121967
BTN 95.995407
BWP 15.202555
BYN 3.671077
BYR 22012.088851
BZD 2.253596
CAD 1.563549
CDF 3228.813776
CHF 0.933666
CLF 0.027554
CLP 1057.377972
CNY 8.114543
CNH 8.130749
COP 4776.005595
CRC 570.227431
CUC 1.123066
CUP 29.761243
CVE 109.597573
CZK 24.915196
DJF 199.591484
DKK 7.460784
DOP 65.958327
DZD 149.523865
EGP 56.852989
ERN 16.845986
ETB 151.224076
FJD 2.551379
FKP 0.841529
GBP 0.848151
GEL 3.094002
GGP 0.841529
GHS 14.809418
GIP 0.841529
GMD 80.295402
GNF 9715.832554
GTQ 8.631513
GYD 234.743452
HKD 8.731578
HNL 29.146504
HRK 7.537795
HTG 146.802733
HUF 405.645177
IDR 18590.107487
ILS 4.022256
IMP 0.841529
INR 96.676477
IQD 1469.749524
IRR 47295.107449
ISK 146.683501
JEP 0.841529
JMD 178.058525
JOD 0.796591
JPY 163.773871
KES 145.010366
KGS 98.212095
KHR 4492.54133
KMF 486.847091
KPW 1010.732476
KRW 1576.53708
KWD 0.344736
KYD 0.935023
KZT 579.426569
LAK 24246.559277
LBP 100522.254683
LKR 335.683798
LRD 224.387522
LSL 20.414362
LTL 3.316121
LVL 0.679331
LYD 6.127684
MAD 10.364284
MDL 19.324458
MGA 5029.416657
MKD 61.552445
MMK 2357.954071
MNT 4013.91157
MOP 8.981743
MRU 44.471593
MUR 50.886394
MVR 17.305779
MWK 1945.581731
MXN 21.932797
MYR 4.817961
MZN 71.783405
NAD 20.414182
NGN 1808.281698
NIO 41.288926
NOK 11.713458
NPR 153.588574
NZD 1.902838
OMR 0.43233
PAB 1.121977
PEN 4.099571
PGK 4.655648
PHP 62.5065
PKR 315.756064
PLN 4.253728
PYG 8962.420679
QAR 4.089695
RON 5.11747
RSD 116.510475
RUB 92.651313
RWF 1605.551112
SAR 4.212491
SBD 9.378552
SCR 15.93072
SDG 674.402811
SEK 10.940182
SGD 1.460272
SHP 0.882553
SLE 25.52765
SLL 23550.10917
SOS 641.200926
SRD 40.718971
STD 23245.193724
SVC 9.817215
SYP 14601.963854
SZL 20.402932
THB 37.083542
TJS 11.585084
TMT 3.941961
TND 3.369481
TOP 2.630331
TRY 43.505999
TTD 7.62066
TWD 34.011039
TZS 3037.892428
UAH 46.623174
UGX 4109.01353
USD 1.123066
UYU 46.862945
UZS 14483.283896
VES 102.309286
VND 29158.7178
VUV 135.488093
WST 2.975783
XAF 651.972109
XAG 0.03458
XAU 0.000338
XCD 3.035141
XDR 0.807091
XOF 651.986534
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.584042
ZAR 20.461258
ZMK 10108.934559
ZMW 29.757985
ZWL 361.626716
  • RBGPF

    2.8600

    65.86

    +4.34%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    22.33

    -0.36%

  • JRI

    -0.0760

    12.95

    -0.59%

  • BCC

    2.4800

    89.58

    +2.77%

  • NGG

    -2.3900

    70.18

    -3.41%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.11

    -0.23%

  • SCS

    0.5700

    10.48

    +5.44%

  • GSK

    -0.3000

    36.87

    -0.81%

  • RYCEF

    0.4300

    10.6

    +4.06%

  • RELX

    -0.8100

    54.06

    -1.5%

  • RIO

    -0.8400

    59.18

    -1.42%

  • BCE

    0.9800

    22.23

    +4.41%

  • BP

    0.4600

    28.59

    +1.61%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    9.25

    -1.62%

  • AZN

    -2.7700

    67.3

    -4.12%

  • BTI

    -1.1500

    43.3

    -2.66%

Totality ready: US braces for April 8 solar eclipse frenzy
Totality ready: US braces for April 8 solar eclipse frenzy / Photo: SUZANNE CORDEIRO - AFP

Totality ready: US braces for April 8 solar eclipse frenzy

US communities along the path of the April 8 total solar eclipse are preparing for the year's biggest astronomic event, with millions of visitors expected to brighten local economies -- and snarl up logistics.

Text size:

Near the US-Canada border in Burlington, Vermont, which is set to experience the totality just before 3:30 pm (1930 GMT), many hotels have been sold out for months.

The few remaining rooms, which typically go for around $150 a night, show online prices of $600-$700 for the night of the eclipse.

"I don't know that we'll have anything quite like this again," Jeff Lawson, a vice president in the chamber of commerce, told AFP.

Lawson marveled at his city's "incredible luck" at an opportunity "quite literally falling out of the sky into your lap."

If skies are clear, the small city of 40,000 could see its population double for the day, with visitors arriving by car, train and even private jet, Lawson said.

An estimated 32 million people live inside the "path of totality" -- under which the Moon will fully block out the Sun -- with an additional 150 million residing less than 200 miles (320 kilometers) from the strip, NASA says.

- Traffic jams -

Preparations for the big day began years ago, Matt Bruning of the Ohio Department of Transportation told AFP.

He said the agency reached out to counterparts along the last major US eclipse, in 2017, and "one of the things that we heard resoundingly was it's never too early to start planning."

Despite those efforts, there will inevitably "be delays, there will be heavy congestion," he warned.

Businesses are leaping into the bonanza with special events and in Cleveland, where local officials expect some 200,000 visitors, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame plans a four-day "Solarfest" of live music.

The Perryman Group, a Texas-based research firm, estimates direct and indirect economic impacts of this year's eclipse could reach $6 billion.

This year's path of totality is about 115 miles wide, wider than in 2017. It begins in western Mexico, arches up through the US cities of Dallas, Indianapolis, and Buffalo, before ending in eastern Canada.

Many schools along the path will be closed or letting students out early, including in Cleveland and Montreal.

Several airlines have advertised flights scheduled to pass under the eclipse, while Delta has even planned two special trips along the path of totality, the first of which sold out in 24 hours, the company said.

NASA warns that only in the path of totality -- and only during the few minutes of the actual totality -- is it safe to look at the eclipse without eye protection.

- 'Cosmic coincidence' -

Almost all of the United States will get to experience a partial eclipse, but UCLA astronomer Jean-Luc Margot says the trip to see the totality is definitely worth the hassle.

"If you have a 99 percent partial eclipse, that is a completely different experience than being in the path of totality," he told AFP.

He will be accompanying a group of UCLA alumni to view the eclipse in rural Texas, after similar trips in 2017 to Oregon and to Chile in 2019.

When people finally see the eclipse, they "tend to be emotional," Margot said.

"It is such a beautiful event. It's due to this complete cosmic coincidence, that the angular size of the Sun and the angular size of the Moon are about the same."

Scientists have traditionally used the eclipses to observe the solar corona, an outer layer of plasma that's difficult to study due to the Sun's bright light, Margot said.

New tools such as the space-based Parker Solar Probe have made such research less eclipse-dependent, but scientists will still be taking full advantage.

NASA recently highlighted several studies being planned for the eclipse, from effects on Earth's atmosphere and animal behavior to even human psychology.

"Eclipses have a special power," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said recently.

"They move people to feel a kind of reverence for the beauty of our universe."

A.Slezak--TPP