To observe the total solar eclipse on November 23-24, 2003, the first one to be witnessed in Antarctica in the history of mankind, I went first to Cape Town in South Africa to take a special Ilyushin IL-76TD flight to the russian station of Novolazarevskaya. The weather was perfect on eclipse day: the sky was blue and clear, the temperature in this beginning of the austral summer around -25°C (-13°F). However turbulences caused by the various atmospheric layers made the observations, at high magnification, difficult just over the ice-capped horizon.
It is worth to mention that, a few days before the eclipse, a huge storm with katabatic winds blowing at over 150 km/h (95 mph) swept accross the Dronning Maud Land area; moreover another storm came in the second day after the eclipse.
The two main focus of this eclipse were that it was just after the midnight Sun and in a truly magical surroundings. For the 2008 February 7 annular solar eclipse I will be back in Antarctica and try to view it from its high point, Mount Vinson at 4,897 m (16,067 ft).
You can use this solar eclipse calculator to compute the local circumstances of the eclipse. The time exposure calculator is there to help you choose your camera settings. With the windchill calculator you can estimate the real temperature.
Click on thumbnails for a larger version
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Full Moon of 2003 November 9 in Maun, Botswana
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Cape Town and Table Mountain (1,086 m — 3,562 ft)
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Eagles near Cap Town
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Research stations locations (inhabited or automatic) in Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica
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Eclipse map (courtesy of Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC)
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Boarding from Cap Town to Novolazarevskaya in Antarctica
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Welcome to our adventure onto the 6th continent
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Ilyushin IL-76TD lower cockpit (Navigator’s pit)
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Ilyushin IL-76TD lower cockpit (Navigator’s pit)
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Ilyushin IL-76TD upper cockpit (pilots and radio)
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Left panel in the Ilyushin IL-76TD upper cockpit
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Ilyushin IL-76TD upper front cockpit (pilots)
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