Third Contact Sequence - 1 (2019 Total Solar Eclipse)

In the first several seconds after the total eclipse ends, a series of dazzlingly bright beads appear along the edge of the Moon and quickly merge to become the crescent Sun. They are formed by sunlight shinning through deep valleys along the irregular limb of the Moon. Francis Baily (Wikipedia) first described this effect after the annular eclipse of 1836. They are known as Baily's Beads in his honor.

The image above is a time sequence shot at 1 frame per second to capture the formation of Baily's Beads just after third contact (i.e., as totality ends). The bright red arc along the edge of the Moon is the Sun's chromosphere (Wikipedia) (a thin layer that sits just above the solar photosphere). Several large solar prominences (Wikipedia) are also visible.

This image is available as a Custom Print.

Additional eclipse photos can be seen at: 2019 Total Solar Eclipse Photo Gallery.

For more information on this event, see: EclipseWise 2019 Total Solar Eclipse.

Technical Details



2019 Eclipse Links

2019 Total Solar Eclipse Photo Gallery

Custom Prints of 2019 Total Solar Eclipse

EclipseWise 2019 Total Solar Eclipse



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