Experience April’s total solar eclipse from the palm of your hand with the ‘Totality’ app from Big Kid Science (Image Credit: Space.com)
A total solar eclipse will be visible across the U.S. on April 8, 2024, and the free “Totality” app developed by Big Kid Science is the perfect tool to accompany your eclipse viewing experience.
The app’s interactive map feature shows you where in the world upcoming solar eclipses will be visible and uses your phone’s GPS to tell you what those eclipses would look like from your current location. If you’re not in the path of totality for an upcoming total solar eclipse, including the one happening in April, “Totality” will also show you the nearest locations from which you can witness totality. The app also contains a wealth of scientific information about eclipses and can even use Google Maps to provide accurate navigation to the path of totality.
Related: Where will the April 2024 total solar eclipse be visible from?
“I saw a need for an easy-to-use app to help both kids and adults know exactly when and where they could watch an upcoming eclipse and that would provide accurate information about safe viewing and eclipse science,” Jeffrey Bennett, “Totality” app creator and founder of Big Kid Science, told Space.com in an email.
Bennett also wanted the app to be free so cost would not be a barrier to anyone. He created the app to help as many people as possible experience totality as well as learn the underlying science behind eclipses. The app was sponsored by the American Astronomical Society.
“I teamed up with Xavier Jubier, who graciously agreed to provide the eclipse prediction code that he wrote for his interactive website, and the two of us worked with the brilliant software engineers at Germinate LLC to turn this vision into reality,” Bennett continued.
The “learn” section provides ample solar eclipse resources such as information on how, when and why solar eclipses occur as well as classroom activities meant to inspire the next generation of budding eclipse chasers.
Download “Totality” on iOS and Android platforms in English, Spanish, French, and Portuguese.
Jeffrey Bennett is an astrophysicist and lead author of best-selling college textbooks spanning subjects like astronomy, mathematics, statistics and astrobiology. He is the founder of Big Kid Science and creator of the “Totality” app.
Why is the eclipse something to get excited about?
Is it worth a long drive somewhere to see “totality”?
And very important for those who live near the path of totality: Don’t round up! You may be tempted to think that a 90% or 99% or even 99.9% partial solar eclipse will give you an ‘almost’ total experience — but it won’t! Even at 99.9%, the sky is still hundreds of times brighter than it is during totality. That means you’ll miss the most incredible parts (like seeing the corona and stars/planets) unless you make the short drive to the full path. So plan ahead — especially since the eclipse is on a school day (Monday, April 8) — and be sure you find a way to be ON the path of totality.
This is particularly important because millions of people live in cities that are either crossed by the edge of the path or are just outside it, including San Antonio, Austin, Cincinnati, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Toronto, Montreal and more.