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IN-PERSON: The April 8 North American Eclipse of the Sun: How to See It Safely   

**This class will be taught In-Person at SFSU's Main Campus in the Humanities Building, Room 133.**

Everyone who attends in person will receive a pair of free, safe-viewing eclipse glasses.

A rare and dramatic eclipse of the Sun is coming to North America on Apr. 8, 2024.  32 million people living in a narrow path from Western Mexico, through Texas, parts of the Midwest, upstate New York, and a slice of New England will see a magnificent total eclipse, where the Moon completely covers the Sun. Everyone else (an estimated 500 million people, including all of us in the Bay Area) will see a nice partial eclipse, where the Moon covers a good part of the Sun. Fraknoi’s talk will describe how eclipses come to be (and why they are total only on Earth), what scientists learn during eclipses, exactly when and where the eclipse of 2024 will be best visible, and how to observe an eclipse and the Sun safely. 

 Andrew Fraknoi, who is sometimes called the “Bay Area’s Public Astronomer,” retired a few years ago as the chair of the astronomy department at Foothill College and still teaches short, noncredit courses on astronomy at San Francisco State and the University of San Francisco.  He is the co-author When the Sun Goes Dark, a book for children about eclipses, and the lead author of OpenStax Astronomy, a free online book that is now the most frequently-used, introductory astronomy textbook in the country. He appears regularly on local and national radio, explaining astronomical developments in everyday language, and was named California Professor of the Year in 2007.  With several colleagues, he is leading the effort to distribute 6 million free eclipse glasses through 13,000 public libraries across the nation, with support from the Moore Foundation.  For more on his work, see: https://fraknoi.com  

 

 

 

This class is not available at this time.  

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