BBC NEWS
BBCiCATEGORIES  TV  RADIO  COMMUNICATE  WHERE I LIVE  INDEX   SEARCH 

BBC News UK Edition
 You are in: Science/Nature: Specials: Eclipse99 
News imageNews image
News Front PageNews image
WorldNews image
UKNews image
EnglandNews image
N IrelandNews image
ScotlandNews image
WalesNews image
UK PoliticsNews image
BusinessNews image
EntertainmentNews image
Science/NatureNews image
TechnologyNews image
HealthNews image
EducationNews image
-------------
Talking PointNews image
-------------
Country ProfilesNews image
In DepthNews image
-------------
ProgrammesNews image
-------------
News image
BBC Sport
News image
BBC Weather
News image
CBBC News
News image
SERVICES
-------------
EDITIONS
Eclipse99Tuesday, 17 August, 1999, 14:08 GMT 15:08 UK
Solar science
Solar eclipse showing Mercury and Jupiter
Solar eclipse showing Mercury and Jupiter
News imageNews image
Special reportNews image
Special reportNews image
11 AugustNews image
WallpaperNews image
MediaNews image
News image
Eighty years ago, Albert Einstein predicted that light should be bent by gravity and that the positions of stars seen near the Sun during an eclipse should be slightly different from when the Sun was not in the way.

An expedition to observe an eclipse in 1919 measured the position of stars during totality and confirmed Einstein's prediction.

Watching from space

Today, most of the scientific study of solar eclipses focuses on the Sun's superheated outer atmosphere - the corona. This is normally difficult because of the ferocious glare of the Sun, but when the Moon blocks out the glare, the surrounding corona is revealed in glorious detail.

Sun's Corona
Scientists still do not understand the corona
For this particular eclipse, several spacecraft will be studying the Sun from orbit, notably the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory and the Japanese satellite Yokoh, as well as the recently launched Transition Region and Coronal Explorer satellite.

The corona is a layer of thin gas at a temperature of many millions of degrees. It lies over the Sun's visible surface, which is at a relatively modest 6,000 degrees. Just how the corona gets so hot is a mystery.

Eclipse experiments

So scientists will be looking for patterns in the inner corona that may be shock waves bringing energy up from below.

They will use the satellite observations and high-speed cameras on the ground.

Some scientists believe that rapidly-oscillating magnetic waves are generated by turbulence in the Sun's upper layers. These may travel along magnetic loops for hundreds of thousands of kilometres and violently whip up the heat of the corona. Researchers hope to photograph these loops in action.

Astronomer
Astronomers will be busy recording all aspects of the eclipse
Another experiment will look at the large-scale structure in the corona over the entire duration of the eclipse.

Astronomers do have instruments that simulate an eclipse by artificially blocking out the Sun's disc but nothing gives them as good a view of the corona as a real solar eclipse - as long as it is not cloudy.

The 1999 total eclipse can be viewed on 11 August.

News image

 WATCH/LISTEN
 ON THIS STORY
News image Video
BBC News' Sue Nelson reports on some of the observations and experiments to be carried out during the eclipse
Links to more Eclipse99 stories are at the foot of the page.


News image
News imageE-mail this story to a friend
News image

Links to more Eclipse99 stories

News imageNews imageNews image
News image
© BBCNews image^^ Back to top

News image
News Front Page | World | UK | England | N Ireland | Scotland | Wales |
UK Politics | Business | Entertainment | Science/Nature | Technology |
Health | Education | Talking Point | Country Profiles | In Depth |
Programmes