Glasses are key, but did you know clothing choice could enhance viewing? – The Mercury News

Nicole Bajic was completing her medical residency at the University of Chicago when she briefly ducked out between surgery training classes to watch the 2017 solar eclipse darken the skies. At the time, she didn’t fully appreciate how much excitement surrounded the event.

Now an ophthalmologist at the Cleveland Clinic Cole Eye Institute in Ohio, Bajic is among the eye doctors, specialists and eclipse experts advising enthusiastic viewers across the country on how they can make April’s total solar eclipse as safe — and as fun — as possible.

“I’m so surprised with how big of a phenomenon this is. I feel like this is a frenzy,” she told the Tribune, in what she said was perhaps her 20th interview about eye safety.

During a total solar eclipse, the moon appears to completely cover the sun, casting its shadow along its trajectory above the Earth. This year’s eclipse will be the second of its kind in the 21st century to touch the contiguous United States. There won’t be another one until 2044. The first one was the 2017 eclipse, which Bajic saw partially from Chicago.

This time, Bajic has carefully thought out her upcoming eclipse experience rather than leaving it to happenstance. She plans to attend a viewing party and then head to the Cleveland Guardians home opener two hours later.

Those who want to watch the eclipse on April 8 should also prepare, experts say.

Ordinary sunglasses won’t do that day. Anyone looking up to the sky should be wearing a pair of safe solar viewing glasses to protect from the sun’s ultraviolet radiation and infrared light, which can cause serious injury to vision and possibly blindness. Even a glance at the sun can be risky.

“You might not be aware of the damage you’re doing to your eyes until it’s too late,” Bajic said.

Even though most people living in the United States will be able to see at least a partial solar eclipse that day, only those in the 115-mile wide path of totality — right under the moon’s shadow — will be able to briefly take their glasses off for approximately four minutes. Cleveland and parts of southern Illinois will be in this path.

“The recommendation is that the absolute only time you can look at the eclipse during totality is when the moon is completely blocking the sun,” Bajic said. “The second that it’s moving, and you might see a tiny glimpse of the sun peeking out, it’s not safe any longer. So you need to look away immediately, and put back the eclipse glasses.”

An eerie shift

For specialists, safety is top of mind. But understanding how the eyes absorb light and perceive color can help viewers enjoy a short-lived, possibly once-in-a-lifetime stargazing event.

The eye will notice light begin to dim five to 10 minutes before the eclipse’s totality. Two minutes before the main event, red colors will fade and contrast with greens and blues in a biological phenomenon called the Purkinje effect.

“It’s very eerie,” said NASA volunteer educator and eclipse chaser Gordon Telepun. “It’s unexplainable because there’s not really another situation where your total ambience lighting can change so it looks like everything is gray or silvery.”

Normally, as day transitions into night, the eyes adjust to the dark as rod cells become more active than cone cells. This period, called dark adaptation, can take anywhere between 30 minutes and two hours.

“But with the eclipse, this process happens too quickly,” said Bajic from the Cleveland Clinic. “You don’t have enough time.”

So the retina takes a while to adjust to the quick change. This part of the eye has two types of photosensitive cells that convert light into signals sent to the brain that allow humans to see the world. Cones are the receptors responsible for colorful vision in the daytime. Rods are the receptors that work in low-light conditions and allow for nighttime vision.

This effect, named after the Czech physiologist who discovered it, occurs as cones struggle to absorb light under the moon’s shadow and rods start activating nighttime vision. This desaturates the colors the human eye perceives, decreasing the reds, slightly increasing the greens and blues, and creating a gray hue.

During the 2017 total solar eclipse, which he saw from Tennessee, Telepun noticed the summer provided great conditions that intensified the contrast: green grass and trees and people in colorful clothes.

“It was incredible. It was really, really strong,” he said. “It’s extremely dramatic in the right situation.”

Two years later, when he saw a total solar eclipse from Argentina during the Southern Hemisphere’s winter in July, the effect was unnoticeable because of the gray landscape and the muted colors people wore.

“Tell your friends and family who you’re going to go to the eclipse with to wear bright colors — ridiculously bright colors,” he said. “A combination of reds and greens, maybe some blues and some yellows, if you want to see the Purkinje effect.”

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