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MIT community members gather on campus to witness 93 percent totality

Hundreds of observers took advantage of great weather to view the 2024 partial eclipse.
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Adam Pressel wears special eclipse glasses as he looks up to the sky, with many people in background.
Caption:
MIT graduate student Adam Pressel gives a thumbs-up while watching the eclipse outside of the Stratton Student Center.
Credits:
Photo: Kathy Wren
A woman takes a photo through a large telescope, as a crowd watches.
Caption:
On the Kresge Oval, the MIT community shares a telescope.
Credits:
Photo: Sonny Oram
2 people lie on the grass while wearing eclipse glasses
Caption:
Two people lie on the ground for a relaxing view of the eclipse.
Credits:
Photo: Sonny Oram
5 people, including one in a wheelchair, look up at the eclipse
Caption:
The MIT community gathers to watch the eclipse.
Credits:
Photo: Sonny Oram
A drone photo captures the darkness caused by the eclipse on Killian Court
Caption:
The eclipse cast an eerie light onto the crowd gathering in Killian Court.
Credits:
Photo: Emily Dahl
Crowds sit on the grass and hang out, with MIT Chapel and other buildings in background.
Caption:
Members of the MIT community gathered outside on the Kresge Oval to wait for the eclipse.
Credits:
Photo: Kathy Wren
Joanna Chen wears special eclipse glasses and look up, with other people doing the same in background.
Caption:
MIT staff member Joanna Chen watches the eclipse.
Credits:
Photo: Kathy Wren
A man looks at the eclipse through his phone’s screen, with many eclipse watchers in background.
Caption:
People gathered at the Kendall/MIT Open Space for a view of the eclipse.
Credits:
Photo: Martha Davis

The stars and other celestial objects truly aligned on MIT’s campus Monday. After a weekend of rain, the community was treated to clear skies and high temperatures to view the only partial eclipse for the next 20 years.

Community members took in the interstellar anomaly in gatherings large and small. Although many traveled north to view the full eclipse, those in Greater Boston were treated with 93 percent coverage and ample ways to appreciate the cosmic wonder.

As the moon met the sun beginning around 2:15 p.m., Kresge Oval hosted crowds of onlookers, with staff members handing out solar filters of various types and encouraging star-struck viewers to sketch what they saw and tell stories. The event was hosted by the MT Edgerton Center and inspired by the seminar EC.050/090 (Recreate Experiments from History: Inform the Future with the Past).

A view of the eclipse through eclipse glasses
Shown here is a photo of the April 8, 2024 eclipse, taken through a pair of eclipse glasses.
Photo: Sarah Foote

On the other side of campus, the MIT Museum also hosted a gathering that included a full afternoon of programming. Attendees could hear from an astronomer and ask questions while they took in the views with solar filter glasses.

In Building 55, home to the Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences (EAPS), where the lives of stars take up a bit more headspace each day, sights and sounds from NASA’s livestream appeared on the department’s large new media wall.

Each of the gatherings could have been a scene out of a science fiction movie as everyone donned their glasses and looked up in amazement at the darkening sky. Those with extra eyewear to share quickly found themselves with new friends to experience the moment with.

“The Edgerton Center is really about building communities, and this was an opportunity to get the MIT community together to observe this thing that rarely happens and have some conversations about what's really going on,” said Jim Bales, the associate director of the Edgerton Center.

Such events have evoked fear and confusion in Earthlings throughout history, but this time, MIT’s community members seemed more prone to appreciative reflection. Many students, faculty, and staff took a break from terrestrial life to take in the rare natural phenomena, a welcome planetary disruption to an otherwise typical Monday on Earth.

A huge crowd at the Lincoln Laboratory poses for group photo, hands up in there.
A huge crowd at the Lincoln Laboratory poses for group photo.
Photo: Nicole Fandel

“Watch parties are cool because you’re learning from what other people have to say about it and you get to meet new people,” said sophomore Sol Roberts. “You can only stare up for so long, but being with other people it makes it more enjoyable.”

Of course, MIT didn’t abandon its scientific bent entirely. The community, after all, was never going to stop helping humanity understand the fundamental workings of the universe. Myriad community members participated in professional and citizen science initiatives of one sort of another. Meanwhile, MIT’s Haystack Observatory in Westford, Massachusetts measured changes in the atmosphere, and members of the Department of Physics took measurements of the sun’s intensity using the shiny new radio telescope on the roof of Building 54.

As surreal as the skies appeared, the Earth’s surface offered equally fun sights. The gatherings made the eclipse at once an intergalactic event and a hyper-local one, an impossibly distant astronomical anomaly shared between friends.

A group of MIT members, including President Sally Kornbluth look up at the eclipse from a balcony.
MIT administrators including Sally Kornbluth (holding brown bag) pause a meeting to enjoy the eclipse.
Photo: Martha Eddison Sieniewicz

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