What effect does a solar eclipse has even if I am not located in the eclipse path? - eclipse
Normally Eclipse way. In some parts of the world will be a total and partial. But if I am in the world where the eclipse is not visible at all. Can I continue the experience of radiation or other effects?
3 comments:
A solar eclipse is a shadow, nothing more. The moon is the sun and the shadow of the moon passes over the face of the earth. If you are in the correct position, the shadow will look directly at you, and a total solar eclipse. If you like what you just the edge of darkness and see a partial solar eclipse. If you are further away, you do not notice anything unusual. No additional radiation, or "strange lights" that occur during an eclipse or any other effect in this case. It is only a shadow. For a solar eclipse can blind, but only because the sun can damage the retina, and this is true or not, that there is a solar eclipse. (In general, it is safe to look because the sun is completely blocked.)
Radiation?
A solar eclipse is caused by the moon passes between Earth and sun. In the darkness, 'path', as you say, the people (in the dark (cover of the sun) or partial shade partial coverage).
That is all there is no radiation, there is no impact on the world whatsoever. Apart from a very low cooling which is temporary shade I guess, but it is so fleeting as to be negligible.
... any effect caused by an eclipse, the search does not cause damage to the eyes, and this is only because the scale of the intensity of the light that we observe is too small to trigger a response to pain, even if the eyes were still damaged by it, this is the only effect comes from the eclipse, and of course, if you want to avoid not looking at the sun without protection when you are in space
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