1. A cardboard box: You can use either a shoe box (like the one used in the explainer video) or an empty cereal box. 2. A white sheet of paper that will be able to cover one end of your box. 6.
If you’re as excited about the eclipse as my 8-year-old is, you’ll want to experience this firsthand, as it happens. But you shouldn’t stare directly at the sun. Instead, you need to build an eclipse ...
The Total Solar Eclipse is Monday August 21st, and it may be hard to find those solar glasses around town. If you don't have a pair and can't find any, here is a way you can easily make a viewer at ...
Eclipse glasses sold out in a matter of days at some Middle Tennessee businesses, leaving some without the NASA approved shades. Here's how you can create your own pinhole projector, so that you don't ...
ORLANDO, Fla. – In order to safely view the April 8 eclipse, you must take the necessary precautions to do so safely. To view the partial portion of a solar eclipse, where a piece of the sun remains ...
CINCINNATI (WXIX) - We are just days away from the highly anticipated solar eclipse. And as many prepare to watch the big event unfold with their children, here are tips and DIY projects you can do to ...
The first total solar eclipse of 2024 is in April and it will be the only solar eclipse this year that will have a path of totality stretching across the U.S. It’s been nicknamed “The Great North ...
Can't get your hands on eclipse glasses? Steve Fentress, director of the Strasenburg Planetarium, gives a homemade example of how to safely view the eclipse for Monday, Aug. 21, 2017. Olivia ...
While cities brace for traffic, schools brace for absences and space enthusiasts are planning parties, the glasses that enable safe viewing of the eclipse have become something of a hot commodity.
NASA Solar System Ambassador, Brenda Culbertson, says you don't need solar eclipse glasses to get the total experience. "I like to use cheap and easy things so if you have it at home, use it,” ...
Some lucky children will be able to catch a total solar eclipse April 8 alongside their parents in an incredible event that will not present itself again until 2044. Families in 13 states – Texas, ...
Florida may not be in the "path of totality" for April's solar eclipse, but that doesn't mean we won't see anything. And that means protecting your eyes, because it's never safe to stare directly at ...