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What Arizona will experience during the April 8 solar eclipse

Phoenix residents will see around 64% of the Sun obscured by the Moon. The April 8 solar eclipse will occur in Phoenix, Arizona, with an estimated 64% of the Sun being obscured by the Moon, starting at 10:08am and peaking at 11:20am. The Phoenix Public Library is providing free glasses for viewing, and many branches are hosting viewing parties. The Arizona Science Center is also hosting a free party and giving out glasses. The southeastern corner of Arizona will see the biggest portion of the eclipse, with Douglas experiencing 75% coverage and Tucson seeing about 70%. Businesses are stocking up on the hype with special items and deals such as a special Total Solar Eclipse Doughnut and cotton candy and dragon fruit-flavored black slush.

What Arizona will experience during the April 8 solar eclipse

Diterbitkan : sebulan yang lalu oleh Jessica Boehm di dalam Science

Phoenix is a thousand miles from the exciting "path of totality" that will see near-total darkness during Monday's solar eclipse, but we'll still get a glimpse of the celestial anomaly. Why it matters: Total solar eclipses that span the contiguous U.S. are exceedingly rare — we won't see another one until 2045, Arizona Science Center engagement specialist Celeste Kenworthy tells us.

The big picture: Around 64% of the Sun will be obscured by the Moon for the eyes of Phoenix residents — with the eclipse starting at 10:08am and peaking at 11:20am. The forecast calls for periods of sunshine and clouds throughout the day.

• At the peak, the eclipse will resemble an upside-down Cheshire Cat smile and the sky will darken to a dusk-like glow, Kenworthy says.

Between the lines: You will need special glasses to view the eclipse, and a solar filter for your camera or phone if you want to photograph the event.

• Check to make sure your glasses meet the international standard ISO 12312-2 before looking at the Sun.

Zoom in: The Phoenix Public Library is providing free glasses while supplies last, and many branches are hosting viewing parties on Monday.

• The Arizona Science Center is also hosting a free party and giving out glasses.

Zoom out: The southeastern corner of Arizona will see the biggest chunk of the eclipse, with Douglas experiencing about 75% coverage.

• Tucson will see about 70%.

Businesses are cashing in on the hype with specialty items and deals.

• Krispy Kreme's special Total Solar Eclipse Doughnut, which features a whole Oreo cookie in the center, will be available Friday through Monday.

• Sonic Drive-In has a new cotton candy and dragon fruit-flavored black slush, which the chain says represents the eclipse's "temporary darkness."

• Pizza Hut is offering large pizzas for $12 Monday in a deal dubbed "Total Eclipse of the Hut."

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