NSYNCs Lance Bass Shows How to Safely View an Annular Solar Eclipse

1 year ago
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On Saturday, Oct. 14, 2023, the Moon will pass
between the Earth and Sun, giving people across
the United States an opportunity to see an annular
solar eclipse, also known as a "ring of fire" eclipse.
Lance Bass has some safety tips to share so that
you don't say "Bye, Bye, Bye" to your vision.
WARNING: During an annular eclipse, it is never
safe to look directly at the Sun without specialized
eye protection designed for solar viewing. Don't be
a space cowboy - learn how to safely view an
eclipse:https://go.nasa.gov/EclipseEyeSafety
Not in the path of the eclipse? Watch with us from
anywhere in the world. We will provide live
broadcast coverage on Oct. 14 from 11:30 a.m. to
1:15 p.m. EDT (1530-1715 UTC) on NASA TV,
NASA.gov, the NASA app, and right here on
YouTube: https://youtube. com/live/LIY79zjud-Q
Learn more about the upcoming annular solar
eclipse: https://go.nasa.gov/Eclipse2023
This "ring of fire" eclipse will be visible along a
narrow path stretching from Oregon to Texas in
the U.S. Outside this path, people across the
contiguous U.S. - as wel as Puerto Rico and parts
of Alaska and Hawaii - will be able to see a partial
solar eclipse, when part of the Sun is covered by
the Moon without creating the ring of fire effect.
Download this video:
https://images.nasa.gov/details/NHQ_2...
Producers: Matt Schara, Scott Bednar, Jessie
Wilde, Sami Aziz, Joy Ng, Emily Furfaro
Credit: NASA

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