Clear skies and full visibility conspired on Monday afternoon to guarantee that science enthusiasts in South Florida had an unobstructed view of the solar eclipse traveling through the United States.
Although South Florida was not in the area of full visibility -also known as the path of totality- observers in Broward, Miami-Dade, Palm Beach and Monroe counties saw the moon cover up to 82 percent of the sun.
Long lines waiting to use the telescopes to see the at the Museum
— Teresa Frontado (@tfrontado)
In downtown Miami, the Frost Science Museum was overrun with eclipse enthusiasts. Several hundred visitors shared viewing glasses and waited in line to peek through one of the two telescopes placed in the Science Plaza. The museum also streamed NASA's eclipse Megacast.
People flocked to Frost Science Museum for today's
— Holly Pretsky (@hollypret)
"It looks like a banana!" said Leia Mufraggi, 8, after looking at the sliver of sun through her solar viewing glasses. Monday was the first day of school, but her parents picked her and her sister Ines, 4, up early to come to the museum.
They were not the only ones, as the museum plaza was swarmed by families -with students still in uniform- looking up to see the progression of the eclipse. The museum ran out of the protection glasses, even for members, but many in the crowds seemed happy to share them so nobody would miss the show in the sky.
"We don't mind sharing. Everybody should be looking up now and seeing this," said sisters MarÃa José and MarÃa Dolores Beletanga, visiting from Ecuador. They took turns to look up through a single pair of glasses and even lent them to another woman they met while waiting at the museum plaza.
Plenty of school kids took advantage of early dismissal to watch the at
— Teresa Frontado (@tfrontado)
Hundreds also gathered on the lawn outside Florida International University's Stocker Astroscience Center for their eclipse party, which included the musical talents of .
At 's Stocker AstroScience Center. The light out here is definitely changing... has more of a sepia tone.
— Kate Stein (@stein_katherine)
Joseph Adams is a senior at FIU who used the pinhole method to view the eclipse. He held his hand in a fist and made a tiny opening for the sunlight to project on his shoe.
"On a normal day when you do this, you should just be able to see a little circle," he said. "But today instead of it being a round circle, it looks almost like a little fingernail."
The observatory at in Miami. Students, parents and faculty gathered on the roof the 3rd floor to see the
— Katie Lepri Cohen (@katielepri)
At Belen Jesuit Preparatory School, an all-boys Catholic school in Miami, the astronomy club gathered on the roof in the school's observatory.
"I saw it at the peak, the most it'll ever be," said Antonio Suarez. He's in fifth grade, and he watched the eclipse at the school with his mom, Ana. She's a computer science teacher there.
"It's special to experience this because he'll be a senior when the next one comes," she said.
The next eclipse visible from the U.S. will take place in 2024.