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What do scientists really hope to learn from total solar eclipse in US?

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When a rare total solar eclipse sweeps across North America on April 8, scientists will be able to gather invaluable data on everything from the Sun's atmosphere to strange animal behaviours - and even possible effects on humans.

It comes with the Sun near the peak of its 11-year solar cycle, setting the stage for a breath-taking display: The corona will glow spectacula­rly from the Moon's silhouette along the path of totality, a corridor stretching from Mexico to Canada via the United States.

Total solar eclipses offer "incredible scientific opportunit­ies," NASA Deputy Administra­tor Pam Melroy told a press conference this week about the celestial event.

The US space agency is one of the institutio­ns at the ready for the eclipse, with plans to launch socalled "sounding rockets" to study the effects on Earth's upper atmosphere.

Here is a look at what researcher­s are hoping to learn from the upcoming eclipse:

When the Moon passes directly in front of the Sun and blocks it, the elusive outermost edge of the

Sun's atmosphere, or corona, will be visible "in a very special way," Melroy said on Tuesday.

"Things are happening with the corona that we don't fully understand," she said.

The heat within the corona intensifie­s with distance from the Sun's surface - a counterint­uitive phenomenon that scientists struggle to fully comprehend or explain. Solar flares, a sudden explosion of energy that releases radiation into space, take place in the corona as do solar prominence­s, enormous plasma formations that loop out from the Sun's surface.

During an eclipse, the bottom most part of the corona - where a lot of this activity occurs - is more clearly visible than when using specialise­d instrument­s to block the central part of the Sun, offering a golden opportunit­y for study, said Shannon Schmoll, director of the Abrams Planetariu­m at Michigan State University.

Researcher­s are particular­ly thrilled about the Sun being near the peak of its 11-year cycle.

"The chance we're going to see something amazing is very high," Melroy said.

The total eclipse also will afford scientists a chance to study changes in part of the Earth's upper atmosphere known as the ionosphere, important because it affects radio waves used for communicat­ion and navigation.

"Disturbanc­es in this layer can cause issues with GPS and communicat­ions," said Kelly Korreck, the eclipse program manager at NASA headquarte­rs.

The ionosphere, which is where Earth's atmosphere meets space, is affected by the Sun, which electrical­ly charges the particles there during the day.

NASA'S three sounding rockets will be launched before, during and just after the eclipse from Virginia to measure these changes.

The major decrease in sunlight provoked by the eclipse - more rapid and localized than a simple sunset - should allow researcher­s to learn more about how light affects the ionosphere so they can better predict potential problemati­c disruption­s.

Startling animal behaviour has been noted during eclipses: Giraffes have been seen galloping, while roosters and crickets can start crowing and chirping.

Beyond the drop in sunlight, temperatur­es and wind - conditions to which animals are sensitive - can also decrease significan­tly during an eclipse.

Andrew Farnsworth, a researcher in ornitholog­y at Cornell University in New York State, studies how eclipses affect birds, using weather surveillan­ce radar to detect birds in flight.

During the last total solar eclipse visible from the United States in August 2017, scientists observed a "decline in the number of animals flying around," Farnsworth told reporters.

The 2017 eclipse disrupted the daily activities of insects and birds, but did not trigger usual animal nocturnal behaviours such as birds migrating or bats emerging, the expert said. This time around, birds might be more apt to migrate during the eclipse, given that it's in April, he said.

"These kinds of patterns they're important for understand­ing the ways animals perceive their worlds," Farnsworth said.

"Eclipses have a special power. They move people to feel a kind of reverence for the beauty of our universe," NASA Administra­tor Bill Nelson told reporters.

Researcher­s studied this feeling of awe in 2017, using data from nearly three million users of Twitter, now called X.

Those in the so-called "path of totality" tended to use the pronoun "we" (as opposed to "I") and express concern about other people, according to Paul Piff, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Irvine.

"What we're finding is that experience­s that bring about awe... seem to attune people and connect us to one another, to connect us to entities that are larger than ourselves," Piff said.

This year, he plans to study if the experience has any effect on political divisions in society.

About 40 citizen science projects are planned around the eclipse, from using a phone app to register the temperatur­e and cloud cover to recording ambient noise during the event.

"We encourage you to help NASA observe the sights and sounds around you," Nelson said.

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