Total eclipse of the sun

General

Description

Originally broadcast as a segment of the television program Johns Hopkins science review on April 21, 1954 from the studios of WAAM in Baltimore, Md. Black and white. Lynn Poole, producer; Kennard Calfee, Herbert B. Cahan, directors; Joel Chaseman, narrator; produced by WAAM television station in Baltimore, Md. for the Dumont Network. Lynn Poole, presenter. Digitized in 2004.

Abstract

In anticipation of the forthcoming total eclipse of the sun on June 30, 1954, Lynn Poole explains a schematic model of the planets' orbits around the sun and primitive peoples' reactions to a solar eclipse. He also briefly describes the layers of the earth's atmosphere: troposphere, stratosphere, ionosphere, and exosphere. Film clips from the National Geographic Society document its expedition to Brazil, in conjunction with the Army Air Force, to witness the May 20, 1947 total solar eclipse. Led by Dr. Lyman J. Briggs, the expedition included other notable scientists from institutions around the world, such as Rev. Francis Hayden, Director of the Georgetown University Observatory. Photography of the eclipse, taken by National Geographic's Richard H. Stewart, shows ambient lighting changes and the sun's corona at the height of the eclipse. A drawing and a model show how the moon obscures the light of the sun, and an animated graph shows the radiant heat curve before, during, and after an eclipse.
Title Language
Dates

Date Published

1954-04-21
Publisher
Language
Identifiers

OCLC Number

54492005

Collection Number

COLL-0008

Item Barcode

31151024442836
Resources
Resource Type
Moving Image

Extent

00:28:50hh:mm:ss
Contributor
Broadcaster (brd): Du Mont Television Network
Director (drt): Cahan, Herbert B.
Director (drt): Calfee, Kennard
Narrator (nrt): Chaseman, Joel
Production personnel (prd): Poole, Lynn
Producer (pro): Poole, Lynn
Copyright and Use
System
Access Rights
Public digital access
Model
Video

Unique ID

82eb90f2-b641-4e4d-a508-f16d967b6a11