Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana and other parts of West Africa, will on November 3, 2013, experience a partial hybrid solar eclipse.
A partial hybrid solar eclipse is an eclipse, where there is a maximum partial cover of the Sun by the Moon.
It will happen at 22 minutes after 1 p.m. that day, barring any rains or cloudy weather, and Ghanians will see the normal afternoon sunny light being dimmed to evening for about one-and-half minutes, when the face of the Sun would be covered 80-85 per cent by the Moon.
The rare phenomenon, was disclosed by Prof Emmanuel Amamoo-Otchere, who was formerly the Executive Director of the Centre for Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems (CERSGIS) of the University of Ghana, Legon. He is now a member of the African Astronomical Society.
He said, the rare occurrence had been known for some time but had to be confirmed by partners such as the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), which has diagrams of the phenomenon on its website.
What to do
The last time Ghana experienced an eclipse was on Wednesday, March 29, 2006, and that was a total one, which occurred from 8.30 a.m. and 9.30 a.m across the country.
Briefing the Daily Graphic, Prof Amamoo-Otchere, who spearheaded information dissemination on the rare occurrence in 2006, when he headed CERSGIS, said it was important for Ghanaians to be aware of what was to happen and protect their sight on that day.
He said all needed shades to view the phenomenon as was done in 2006.
How it will happen
"There will be partial darkness, similar to dusk, and the eclipse will be seen in Eastern America, sliding to West Africa and finally dissipating in Central Africa," Prof Amamoo-Otchere said.
"Those along the coast, from Half Assini to Aflao, will experience a wave of darkness in the skyline of a duration of a minute or two. He said inland, the phenomenon would be experienced in the northern parts of the country, as far as Burkina Fasso," he added.
Prof Amamoo-Otchere said what was not certain was animal behaviour at the time of the eclipse, but he said it was likely that for the split moment of darkness, some birds would change direction in flight.
"It is possible to see some twinkling stars and some planets," he added.
Prof Amamoo-Otchere said for him, the phenomenon showed that there was a super engineer, that is God, who was super precise in all his doings and was still working.
He said, it also showed the scientific skill of man in calculating the point at which the Sun, Earth and Moon aligned that resulted in one blocking the other.
Latest Stories
-
EOCO affidavit clarifies that Gabriel Tanko Atokple was not declared “wanted”
15 minutes -
Fire outbreak at Akosombo Substation disrupts power supply – GRIDCo
27 minutes -
Bank of Ghana fails to publish 2025 financial statements in violation of BoG Act
32 minutes -
CEOs must act boldly as Ghana faces a defining economic moment – McDan
37 minutes -
LPG operators association commends NPA after stakeholder engagement meeting
40 minutes -
OSP power row can be fixed – Asah-Asante counters CSO concerns over court ruling
52 minutes -
Sam George flags ‘headucator’ video for possible prosecution under LGBTQ+ Bill
59 minutes -
Presec-Legon tops 2025 NSMQ rankings as Prempeh, Mfantsipim follow in EN Analytics Top 100
1 hour -
Photos: GFA unveils new Black Stars Coach Carlos Queiroz
1 hour -
Oforikrom Municipal Assembly prepares candidates for 2026 BECE
1 hour -
From classroom to workshop: TVET students in Accra assemble bicycle
1 hour -
AGI pushes for clearer lending rules as BoG expands credit access
1 hour -
Sefwi Wiawso passport centre records 1,700 applications in explosive four-month start
1 hour -
DVLA, MTTD storm East Legon in massive fake DVLA plate crackdown
2 hours -
Republic Bank Ghana PLC records profit of GHS288m in 2025, declares GHS0.5 dividend per share
2 hours