This is the unique story of observing a total solar eclipse for no less than 74 consecutive minutes. On the summer morning of June 30, 1973, the Sun rises on the Canary Islands. But it is strangely indented by the Moon. The eclipse of the century has just begun. From the west, the lunar shadow rushes to the African coast at a velocity of over 2000 kilometers per hour. Astronomers on the ground will enjoy seven short minutes of total eclipse to study the solar corona - too short for Pierre Léna and seven scientists who board the Concorde 001 prototype, an extraordinary plane to become the first commercial supersonic aircraft. With André Turcat as chief pilot and his crew of five, at 17000 m altitude, the aircraft remains in the lunar shadow for 74 minutes, a record time of scientific observations allowing for exceptional measurements and not yet beaten. Science, technology, aviation and history combine in the story of a unique human adventure aboard a legendary aircraft, illustrated with a rich and original iconography. It reflects the wonderful domains that science and technology can open, and the passion in the professions they offer. Fifty years after this flight, the Sun's corona has yet to reveal all its secrets. A tenuous cloud of gas and dust, it influences the Earth, creates the aurora borealis, affects communications and can endanger satellites. To better understand it, we need to decipher its images. This enlarged second edition adds two full chapters dedicated to the solar corona and its plasma and its dust. In a final chapter the authors make the link to todays great adventure of astrophysics: the search for exoplanets, Earth's twin sisters, around stars not too far from the Sun, which are detected and studied through eclipses of their host stars. This book testifies to the horizons of science and the unprecedented emotions it can bring to us all. A must read for every eclipse chaser and fan of true scientific adventures.
Pierre Léna is emeritus professor at Paris Observatory, Serge Koutchmy (1940-2023) was a recognised solar astronomer and eclipse specialist.
PART I The longest total eclipse ever observed.- Opening.
Chapter
1. Of
eclipses and men.
Chapter
2. Concorde, a dream that takes flight.
Chapter
3. This dark light that falls from the stars.
Chapter
4. Towards the longest
total eclipse in history.
Chapter
5. No need to be alarmed, its simply an
eclipse.
Chapter
6. What harvest of science after these 74 minutes?.-
Epilogue to Part I.- PART II Solar corona, total eclipses and exoplanets.-
Chapter 7 The solar corona (K and F).
Chapter 8 Debris disks, exoEarths and
coronagraphy.- Conclusion.- Appendix 1 How total eclipses occur.- Appendix 2
The Concorde plane.
Pierre Léna, born in 1937, is an astrophysicist at the Observatoire de Paris (Paris Sciences Lettres) and a member of the Académie des sciences since 1991. Professor emeritus at the Université Paris Cité, he has trained many young people in their discovery of astronomy and their entry into research. His scientific career is rounded off by his work with La main ą la pāte, of which he is one of the three co-founders, to promote the discovery of science in elementary school in France and around the world, and by his numerous publications aimed at the general public. In particular, he contributed to the installation of adaptive optics and interferometry on the European Very Large Telescope, which has been in Chile since 1998, and to the major results this made possible.
Serge Koutchmy (1940-2023), born in Le Creusot (Saōne-et-Loire), is an astrophysicist and research director at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris. After studying at Moscow's Lomonossov University and obtaining a PhD from Paris University in 1972, he joined the Institut d'astrophysique (CNRS and Sorbonne University). A world specialist in the physics of the solar corona and its observation methods from the largest terrestrial observatories, as well as from space (CNES medal, 1983), he has collaborated with the USA, Japan and Russia, organized numerous expeditions to observe total solar eclipses and always supported amateur astronomers within the Société Astronomique de France, from which he received the prestigious Janssen medal in 1998.