How To Build Your Own Eclipse Viewer
Category
🤖
TechTranscript
00:00Ah, this is so cool!
00:06On August 21st, people across the United States will have a rare opportunity to catch a glimpse
00:11of a total solar eclipse.
00:14During an eclipse, the sun, earth, and moon align during the daytime so that the moon
00:19blocks the light of the sun, either partially or completely.
00:22Even during a total eclipse, looking directly at the sun can cause severe eye damage.
00:27So what are your options?
00:28Well, you could build a personal solar eclipse viewer, kind of like a movie theater for an
00:33audience of one.
00:34Here's what you'll need.
00:36A cardboard box, any type of shoe box will do, a piece of white paper, a pin or a needle,
00:41a piece of tinfoil, an X-Acto knife, and some tape.
00:45Let's get started.
00:46First, we're going to cut a small hole in the box about one inch across near the top.
00:52Next, we are going to cover that hole with a piece of tinfoil.
00:59Then we are going to poke a hole in the tinfoil right in the middle.
01:03So the pinhole is going to be your aperture.
01:05That's how the image of the sun is going to project on the inside of the box.
01:09So now we're going to tape a piece of paper to the inside, and that's going to be your
01:12projection screen.
01:13And we're taping it right across from the hole you just made.
01:16Now, the last thing you're going to need to do is cut a viewing hole, and you're going
01:19to do that on the side of the box that's adjacent to the screen and a little bit closer
01:24to your aperture.
01:25And you want your hole to be about an inch in diameter.
01:27So you have your viewing hole, your aperture, and your projection screen.
01:34Let's go test it.
01:35So to test your viewer, you're going to take it outside on a sunny day.
01:38Now, remember, don't look directly at the sun.
01:41You're going to hold up your viewer so that the aperture, the piece of tinfoil with the
01:44hole in it, that's facing the sun.
01:46Sun is going to project through that inside the box.
01:48And what you're going to do is you're going to look inside the viewing hole, and you will
01:53see a projection of the sun inside the box.
01:58I can totally see the sun.
02:00And so during a total eclipse, you'll be able to see the shadow of the moon moving across
02:04the sun and without frying your eyeballs.
02:07This is Mindy Weisberger for Live Science.
02:09Happy eclipse viewing.