If ever there is a total solar eclipse (TSE) for which an airborne viewing opportunity is essential,
it is for the geographically remote TSE 04 December 2021 (Saturday) UTC.



TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE AIRBORNE-INTERCEPT FLIGHT
 04 DECEMBER 2021 UTC
DESIGNATED: EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE

Developed by Dr. Glenn Schneider*
Steward Observatory and the Department of Astronomy, The University of Arizona
Phone: 520-621-5865, email: gschneider@as.arizona.edu
*A Collaborative Undertaking and Flight Project Planned and Implemented by:
Glenn Schneider (U. Arizona), Tim Todd (T.E.I. Tours & Travel), John Beattie (Project Specialist), and LATAM Airlines


  A Spectacular Total Solar Eclipse 2021 Observation Flight Opportunity:
Intercepting the Moon’s Earth-Grazing Umbral Shadow Axis at 39,000/37,000* ft
Launched from Punta Arenas in Southern Chile

*Note: For EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE we will be flying two identically configured LATAM A321-200 jetliners. The two A321-200s will identically follow the same UTC-correlated Totality Run” (TR) track as described below. They will do so by flying the TR in tandem separated vertically by 2,000 ft. Their respective TR plans differ only by their assigned flight altitudes of nominally 39,000 and 37,000 ft (which we designate for Plane Blue and Plane Gold, respectively).
{N.B.: The differences in eclipse circumstances for our co-located aircraft at 39,000 and 37,000 ft are inconsequentially small.}

     A total solar eclipse (TSE) is, unequivocally, one of natures grandest spectacles and most awe-inspiring events that we can see with our own eyes! But, the elusiveness of the path of totality for TSE 2021 (Figure 1) has left many eclipse-chasers fretting and asking how the heck am I going to get there? We now can answer as we have planned and are vigorously pursuing a unique opportunity to view the eclipse from two high-altitude jetliners in a near-sunrise moonshadow rendezvous, above the otherwise high-probability occurrence of clouds below.


Figure 1. TSE 2021 path of totality and EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE circumstances tabulation.
Yellow + marks the location  of our on-centerline Mid-Eclipse Intercept (MEI) for our ex-Punta Arenas Airbus A321-200 eclipse-flight charter.
By comparison, on the Earths surface, at the much more distant point of greatest duration (GD) eclipse, totality is only 9 seconds longer than will be seen from our aircraft.
See HERE for the representative extent of circum-Antarctic sea-ice extrusion for early December.

The TSE 2021 Path of Totality

     The location of the “path of totality” (PoT), the only region from where the eclipse can be seen as total, is dictated by the inexorable laws of celestial mechanics that heed no geographical or geopolitical boundaries. In order to see the eclipse as total (i.e., “totality”) – a truly amazing and awe-inspiring celestial phenomenon like no other – one must be within the PoT that the Moon’s shadow traces out as it sweeps over a small sliver of the Earth’s surface (see Figure 1). An observer located within the PoT at the right moment in time will be enveloped by, and immersed within, the Moon’s umbral shadow for the fleeting few moments of its passage. The width of the path is defined by its northern and southern limits (pink lines in Figure 1), outside of which the eclipse will be seen only as partial, or not at all.

     Unlike many PoTs, the TSE 2021 umbral shadow axis as viewed from the ground passes
over and beyond the pole before it reaches the Earths surface. Thus, as shown in this animation* with a viewpoint originating at the Moon and looking toward the Earth along the shadow axis, the umbral traverse across the polar region is primarily from east to west, i.e., opposite the direction of the Earths rotation.  (*In this animation the large red circle is the lunar penumbra inside of which the eclipse is visible only as partial.  The very small red dot is the projection of the lunar umbra on the ground passing behind the South Pole and where, from within, the eclipse is seen as total.) A second animation from the view point of an observer hovering above the South Pole clearly illustrates the backward traverse of the lunar shadow from east to west as projected on the surface of the Earth. This is opposite the direction of the Earths rotation from west to east.

     Observing TSE 2021 from the surface of the Earth within its PoT poses significant logistical challenges. If ever there was a TSE in need of an airborne viewing option, it is TSE 04 December 2021 for which totality is visible only over remote and difficult-to-reach areas of Antarctica, parts of the ice-strewn Weddell and oft-foggy Scotia Seas
(partially inclusive of some of the South Orkney Islands), and a small stretch of the south Atlantic Ocean southeast of the Falkland (Malvinas) Islands. These very few noted land- or ocean-based “options”, however, have quite adverse prospects with respect to eclipse visibility (weather), remoteness (and prevailing winds), and cost of access, where totality might otherwise be seen. A number of ships will be headed to locations accessible in the Scotia and northern Weddell Seas where the circum-Antarctic pack ice is not impenetrable, though the likelihood of cloudiness will be quite high (see analysis by eclipse weather expert Jay Anderson). While some undeterred umbraphiles will assuredly take up these challenges, there unquestionably will be a much larger constituency, and very high demand, for an eclipse flight for TSE 2021 – and specifically as we have designed and are working now to implement with our aircraft provider LATAM Airlines.


TOP 10 REASONS FOR A HIGH-ALTITUDE TSE 2021 ECLIPSE FLIGHT
1. DEPLOYMENT/RELOCATION FLEXIBILITY
To Provide Otherwise Dauntingly Difficult Access to the TSE 2021 PoT
2. CLOUD OBSCURATION AVOIDANCE
  At 39,000/37,000 ft Cloud-Free Skies are Virtually Assured
3. UNPARALLELED HORIZON REACH & OBSERVATION VISTA
Apparent Horizon 390/380 km Distant, Depressed 3.5°/3.4°
(at 39,000/37,000 ft)

4. AMAZING VIEWS OF THE UMBRA APPROACH & RECESSION
Simultaneously in the Dark Sky Above and on the Clouds and
Ocean Surface Far Below

5. TOTALITY PROLONGATION FOR LONGER DURATION
Aircraft Speed Extends the Duration of Totality
6. SKY DARKNESS
Much Higher Coronal Contrast and Visibility to Larger Circumsolar Distance
7. SKY TRANSPARENCY
 Very Low Particulate and Aerosol Atmospheric Scattering

8. PANCHROMATIC VISIBILITY
Infrared and Ultraviolet Windows Open Up or are Extended
9. IMPROVED ASTRONOMICAL SEEING
R_naught Decreases with Increasing Altitude
10. REDUCED ATMOSPHERIC TURBIDITY
Vorticity & Sheer Decline in Power Above Lower Troposphere



EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE: A Unique Horizon-Venue Sunrise” Totality
     As with all our prior EFLIGHTs, we will centrally intercept the Moon’s umbral shadow at the selected instant of mid-totality along the centerline of the PoT. This time, we are designing our flight plan to optimize that experience very near the sunrise (northern) extremum of the PoT. This is where center of the Moon’s umbral shadow axis first touches down upon, and there is tangent to, the surface of the Earth. From this location the Sun is framed in total eclipse on the terrestrial horizon that is depressed (dipped) below the unobscured horizontal-plane of the astronomical horizon by 3.5°/3.4° thanks to the aircraft altitudes of 39,000/37,000 ft.


EFLIGHT Charter Plan in Progress

     The proximity of the PoTs northern sunrise line to both the Punta Arenas (as a launch point) and Mt. Pleasant (Falkland/Malvinas Islands) airports fortuitously permits us to employ two well-suited, single-aisle, A321-200 jetliners that are available for charter in the region operating under ETOPS60 rules – more economical than a single wide-body would have been. ETOPS (Extended-range Twin-engine Operation Performance Standards) 60 provides the requisite safe-return operational reach of our two A321-200s to the sunrise limit of the PoT through the planned (contingency, but highly unlikely) use of Mt. Pleasant airport as a single-engine-out diversionary return airport. In our case, ETOPS60 provides us with a nearest contingency landing facility (Mt. Pleasant) that both satisfies safety requirements and which is (more than) sufficient to plan an optimal sunrise MEI. This is schematically illustrated in Figure 2. Adopting this plan, we are now in the process of refining all the details of our EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE eclipse-viewing charter with the aircraft provider/operator, LATAM Airlines, per our detailed specifications. The two A321-200 jetliners we have arranged meet (and exceed) all of our technical requirements and are ideal for this flight scenario.

Figure 2. Graphic schematic overview of the EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE charter concept.
Red dotted circles show overlapping ETOPS60 operating limits for PUQ and MPN reaching and enclosing the sunrise limit of the PoT.
Purple dashed lines respectively represent the outbound (longer) and inbound (shorter) cruise phases to and from the Totality Run start and end points.
Gray dashed pattern represents an up to 45-minute circle and hold to synchronize to UTC the start of the totality run per flight margin requirements.
Red dot after turn inside the MPN ETOPS60 limits (405.4 nm from MPN) indicates the start of the totality run (blue line),
at which time/location the lower limb of the partially eclipsed Sun will be rising over the depressed terrestrial horizon.
CHART ACRONYMS                     
AMSL    Above Mean Sea Level
ETA     Estimated Time of Arrival
ETD     Estimated Time of Departure
ETOPS   Extended-range Twin-engine Operating Performance Standards
MEI     Mid-Eclipse Intercept
MPN     Mount Pleasant airport code
PUQ     Punta Arenas airport code
TR      Totality Run
TREND   Totality Run End
TRSTART Totality Run Start (405.4 nm from MPN)
UTC     Universal Time (Coordinated)

The “Sunrise” Mid-Eclipse Intercept (07:02:14 UTC)

     The Moon’s umbral shadow touches down on the Earth
s surface along our planet’s night/day terminator nearly due east of Punta Arenas. This, serendipitously, is both the closest launch point (along with Ushuaia, which we considered but declined) and shortest flight-time for a charter flight to reach centerline, and in particular the MEI target-point for our “sunrise EFLIGHT. At this location, and instant of time, the trajectory of the lunar umbral shadow stretching back approximately 400,000 km into space will emanate from the totally-eclipsed Sun on the astronomical horizon (everywhere 90° from the zenith). Second-by-second, during the 1m 45s of our airborne totality as the surface projection of the shadow rapidly decelerates, the lunar umbra will horizontally sweep around, over, and then engulf the aircraft in darkness like a broad darkness-inverted searchlight beam. Those who have seen a similar phenomenon from the ground (e.g., Figure 3) have described the effect there as “God’s bowling alley”. This will be even more accentuated with the 390/380 km distant terrestrial horizon at 39,000/37,000 ft depressed by 3.5°/3.4° from the astronomical horizon (coincident with the origin of the shadow) as we fly at Mach 0.78 (approximately 447 kts true air speed) centrally through the darkness of the Moon’s umbral shadow.


Figure 3. “God’s bowling alley” (TSE 2002 December 04 UTC) as photographed by Carter Roberts at sea level from Lyndhurst, South Australia.  
The eclipsed Sun is 4° above the at-sea-level-coincident astronomical and terrestrial horizons. 

For our 
EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE the totally eclipsed Sun will be ON the astronomical horizon, but with the apparent (terrestrial) horizon depressed by 3.5°.

     While the
big show, of course, is totality, the proximity of Punta Arenas to the sunrise line at umbral touchdown on the Earth provides a unique opportunity to observe TSE 2021 totality with the rapidly decelerating shadow cone grazing tangentially along the surface of the Earth (e.g., see Figure 3 with a similar geometry at mid-eclipse). From our lofty EFLIGHT venue our SUNRISE aircraft will provide some of the most esthetically stunning views of the opening terrestrial traverse of the lunar umbra.

     Our “Totality Run (TR) approach to the MEI (where at MEI itself the center of the lunar umbra first and fully obliquely touches down on the Earth at 39,000/37,000 ft AMSL) begins 25.2 minutes prior to mid-total eclipse. At that TR Start time (06:37:02 UTC) the lower limb of the Sun in partial eclipse will touch and then rise over the -3.5°/-3.4° depressed terrestrial horizon (see Figure 4). The increasingly partially-eclipsed Sun then ascends toward totality with a diminishing solar photospheric crescent fully obscured by the Moon at the end of the C2 diamond ring at 07:01:23, heralding the start of 1m 45s of totality.


Figure 4. Schematic depiction of Sun rising during partial eclipse ingress from 39,000 ft as seen from EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE with the Suns lower limb on the terrestrial horizon at the start of the Totality Run.

     Though only the opening act preceding totality, this proximal MEI location to Punta Arenas and within the MPN ETOPS60 circle permits us to program an approach for the SUNRISE totality run track that will initially present a 47% (obscured by area) partially eclipsed Sun at lower-limb sunrise. The partially-eclipsed sunrise also marking the start of our totality run, like totality itself, will be visible from the left side of the aircraft*.  (*Due to the low elevation angle of the eclipse, from a few seat rows flanking the third emergency exit door the aircraft wing itself will block this view, and the view of totality as well. Thus, these few specific rows will not be used for eclipse viewing.)

      At this extreme line-of-sight sunrise viewing geometry, as the Sun ascends the apparent horizon, its partially-lunar-occluded disk may take on an oblate or even more extreme morphologically distorted shape due to differential atmospheric refraction with the possibility of a partially-eclipsed omega effect, or even more extreme
distortions and/or a green flash while rising in partial-eclipse.

      At our 07:02:14 MEI, thanks to the aircraft
altitude, the totally eclipsed Sun will gloriously stand approximately 3.5°, i.e., 14 solar radii, above the depressed terrestrial horizon and straight out the left-side passenger windows. There, the umbral axis will lie in the horizontal plane parallel to surface of the Earth with the Moons conical shadow stretched out and over the astronomical horizon as seen in perspective sweeping over a distance of nearly 400 km, framing the Suns magnificent corona as it circumscribes and enshrouds the ashen lunar disk for a stunning, ethereal 1m 45s of totality.

     
This will be a TSE viewing flight of an entirely different flavor!


CENTERLINE and Mid-Eclipse-Intercept (MEI)

     The total phase of TSE 2021 is optimally viewed from along the “centerline” of the PoT midway between the northern and southern path limits. The very center of the Moon
s shadow, which traces out the centerline of the PoT, is where (for any location along the path) the totality duration is longest, the sky is darkest (amazingly so at 39,000/37,000 ft*), and the view of totality is optimal. (*At their high-level eclipse-viewing altitudes both aircraft will be above approximately 80% of the Earths atmosphere and will put us into the tropopause, where the concerns of sub-polar weather (and clouds) will remain in the troposphere below.) Our EFLIGHT is designed to be precisely on centerline just as the Moon’s shadow axis reaches that centrally-located position of the aircraft, i.e., this is the UTC time-correlated point of “Mid-Eclipse Intercept” (MEI) around which the rest of the flight is planned.

     The centerline of the path of totality, for all practical purposes, may be expressed as a (UTC) time-correlated set of waypoints (latitude, longitude) that maps out the central position of the Moon’s umbral shadow as it traverses the Earth. In principle, totality may be seen (where accessible and not cloudy on the ground) anywhere along that path. The TSE 2021 eclipse geometry and local circumstances guide us in selecting our MEI location in concert and in conformance with normal aircraft performance characteristics and ETOPS60 operational limitations – and (most importantly!) above otherwise potentially problematic sub-polar cloudy weather.



BASELINE End-to-End Plan

     Routing: The EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE flight plan can be best described as an
approximately 5-1/2 hour round-trip flight to/from the same originating location, Punta Arenas, with the inclusion of an additional critically-defined approximately half-hour leg called the “Totality Run” (TR). It is from there that for 1m 45s, totality centered on 07:02:14 UTC will be observed with the aircraft concentrically located along the axis of the Moons umbral cone at the instant of mid-eclipse. The turn onto the totality run is immediately preceded by a contingency, real-time tunable, “circle and hold” (C&H) segment for UTC ground-track synchronization of the start of the TR in the event of a delayed take-off from Punta Arenas. The end-to-end basically “triangular” EFLIGHT plans PUQ→eclipse→PUQ can then be described as:
  1. take-off (“wheels-up” not push-back)
  2. airport pattern departure and ascent to top-of-cruise (TOC)
  3. outbound cruise toward totality run
  4. contingency circle and hold for up to 45 minutes for UTC synchronization
  5. release onto totality run at UTC-correlated TRSTART waypoint (lower-limb sunrise at TRSTART)
  6. totality run (inclusive of, and anchored on, the UTC-correlated MEI point)
  7. inbound return to start-of-descent (SOD)
  8. descent and pattern approach
  9. landing
where (1 – 3) and (7 – 9) are as usual on any flight, but here with (4 – 6) augmenting the usual “point-to-point” plan with the inclusion of the time-critical Totality Run. 

     Aircraft: We have proceeded with our baseline planning for our chartered Airbus A321-200, ETOPS60 rated aircraft, as we are fine-tuning the operational details of their joint flight plan with our aircraft provider/operator, LATAM Airlines. We predicate our baseline plans for a true air speed (TAS) of 447 kts (Mach 0.78) for the Totality Run in particular, also assumed as cruise speed for other pre- and post-requisite flight segments in straight-and-level flight.

    Flight Duration (with 45-minute in-air contingency margin): For baseline plan definition and tolerance with in-segment flight-time variation for actual winds aloft we assume no winds, but provide margins in the end-to-end plan to compensate for actual winds aloft in flight. With these baseline assumptions we estimate the end-to-end duration as closely proximate to 5.5 hours. Preliminary estimated time of departure (ETD) = 03:39 UTC ex-Punta Arenas (to be updated/confirmed).


BASELINE Totality Run
 
     Predicated by the MEI UTC and location for EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE flight, the end-to-end baseline totality run may be represented in simple parametric form with three key time-correlated waypoints defined by their start, MEI, and end. We enter the TR run track 25.2 minutes prior to MEI (allowing for pre-totality sunrise viewing). The TR ends 6 minutes after MEI.

Totality Run Waypoint
UTC (hh:mm:ss)
Aircraft Longitude
Aircraft Latitude
TRSTART
06:37:02
W04806.112
S5006.932
MEI
07:02:14 W05110.202
S5234.421
TREND
07:08:14
W05157.054
S5308.783
(all coordinates WGS84 referential datum)

CLICK HERE for a multi-parametric tabulation of this Totality Run with 1 minute time granularity w.r.t. MEI after ETOPS60-limited TRSTART (START).

CLICK HERE
for an explanation of the multi-parametric tabulation.


TIMING CONTINGENCIES (pre-planning for success)

     The PUQ→eclipse→PUQ EFLIGHT plan is designed with more than sufficient time to execute all flight segments.
In the unlikely event of a take-off delay, or with unfavorable outbound winds, our pre-planned, expendable, C&H leg provides an additional in-flight margin of up to 45 minutes for the successful attainment of the MEI exactly as planned. Beyond this margin, we have further contingency flexibility to modify the TR if necessary, maintaining the same MEI by shortening the length of its pre-C2 TR segment by up to approximately 20 additional minutes.


COMPARATIVE RISK ASSESSMENT - TSE 2021


       Ground-based (including sea-going) TSE observations are inherently
risky due to the ever-present possibility of uncooperative weather. This is the case, in particular, from sky cover obscuration due to clouds, fog, or precipitation that differ from eclipse to eclipse and with location.  E.g., for statistical expectations and discussion specifically germane for TSE 2021 see HERE. Therein the risk of cloud cover obscuring totality for locations reachable by ship is summarized by eclipse-weather expert Jay Anderson as Over the oceans, cloud cover averages more than 90% {!} 

      
When path access is limited (as extremely so for TSE 2021) but not impossible, and nature conspires against us with high risk of obscuring clouds, some will nonetheless (grudgingly) accept such risks when no other alternatives are presented.

     Such high-risk scenarios, however, are eliminated by
employing a high-altitude jet aircraft as a platform for eclipse observations.  Risk is never entirely mitigated, but typically can be reduced to at most a few percent.  E.g., while the statistical expectation of opaque cloud above 39,000/37,000 ft is vanishingly small for a sub-polar eclipse such as TSE 2021 where we plan to intercept, it is non-zero due to other remote possibilities.  E.g., one could posit various, but highly unlikely, reasons the point-of-departure airport could shut down due to low-probability events, but the percentage “chance of that occurring at requisite take-off time is counted generously on fingers far less than on one hand. 

     In the case of our EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE scenario, the risk of not
seeing totality is somewhat high by airplane expectations (but extremely low compared to anything else!). That risk is about 4%, and potential flight participants must understand (and accept) this risk. 

     This risk comes about from the necessity to plan a requisite contingency ETOPS60 diversion landing return specifically at the Royal Air Force (UK) Mt. Pleasant airport (MPN) in the Falkland (Malvinas) Islands.  MPN is the only existing facility for such planning that allows us to boot-strap with an ETOPS60 hop to the path of totality (see Figure 2).  During the months of November and December (climatologically representative of the December 4 eclipse time of year), approximately 4%* of the time, MPN experiences a high-wind phenomenon known as
rotor winds – severe low-level turbulence causing a temporary closing of the runway until subsidence.  (*Based on prior year NOTAMS (Notice to Airmen) statistics; e.g., in 2018 MPN was closed to air traffic for a total of 61 hours out of 1464.)  While we do not plan at all to land at MPN, it must be available (open) to us while we are in the air. Thus, if the MPN runway closes for this reason (or is forecast/predicted to close) during that time, we would not be permitted to take off from PUQ.  To put in perspective in comparison to the next best option by ship, the statistical expectation of the likelihood of success by deploying into a cloud-free sky with EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE is approximately 96%, whereas the odds of successfully viewing the eclipse on the ocean are < 10% (per quoted reference from J. Anderson, above).


WINDOW-SHARING and ECLIPSE-VIEWING

     Probably the most often asked questions related to the aircraft windows for eclipse viewing are:
  1. What are the aircraft windows like?
  2. Could I share a window in an eclipse-viewing seat row with a partner to watch the eclipse?
    From our many past experiences we can answer as follows:

1a) QUALITY: Commercial aircraft windows are not research-grade optics. Nonetheless, if not optically degraded in some fashion, such windows are typically more than well suited for visual and/or binocular viewing of TSEs, and for wide- to intermediate-field photographic imaging and even low-resolution spectroscopy.  Several examples are offered below. This, of course, depends upon the window quality. LATAM is aware to provide us with the best - i.e., typically the newest - two A321-200
s in their fleet that they possibly can, with defect-free, distortion-free, and scratch/sleek-free windows being a top priority. Aircraft with more than a minimal number of such window artifacts will be rejected from our consideration. Window cleanliness (free of dust, dirt, oils, or any other light-scattering materials or particulates), of course, is also essential; and well-proven protocols for pre-EFLIGHT window cleaning (without leaving residual streaks) are called out in a technical annex to our charter requirements.

Though no photographs can come close to reproducing the magnificent views captured on our retinas and interpreted by our visual cortices, here are a few images taken on prior EFLIGHTs through their aircraft windows indicative of their suitability for TSE observing.

Wide-Field Imaging: View from EFLIGHT 2015 March 20 UTC over the Norwegian Sea at Second Contact, 35,000 ft.

Canon EOS 5D Mark III Digital SLR at ISO 1600, 1/60th sec, 14mm EFL f/2.8 Rokinon IF ED UMC Ultra Wide-Angle Lens used at f/4.
Glenn Schneider and Geoff Simms

Coronal Imaging from EFLIGHT 2015 over the Norwegian Sea, 35,000 ft.
Inner Corona
Mid+Outer Corona


Nikon D3000 + 300 mm f/5.6 VR lens (ISO 800) – handheld. Left: single frame, right: 5 frame stepped exposure time composite.
Glenn Schneider

Click HERE for some remarkable HDR coronal imaging from EFLIGHT 2003 November 23-24 UTC by Miloslav Druckmüller and David Finlay – Antarctica, 35,000 ft.

Totality Time-Resolved Coronal Ramp Up/Down Imaging from EFLIGHT 2010 July 11 UTC – South Pacific, 39,000 ft.

Nikon DX3 camera at ISO 200 and VR 80-400 mm lens at 400 mm f/5.6. (Double-click on the image mosaic to view at larger scale.)
Glenn Schneider

Near-Infrared (0.7 to 1.0 micron) Chromospheric “Flash” Spectrum at C2 from EFLIGHT 2019-MAX (July 2) – 1,100 km N. of Easter Island, 41,000 ft.

ICARUS near-IR grating spectrograph with Canon EOS 500D camera ISO 200  IR extended and Peltier cooled, 3.2s exposure.
Glenn Schneider and Aris Voulgaris


1b) METROLOGY. Below is an annotated photograph that shows the Airbus A320-family window metrology. This particular photo was actually taken from our EFLIGHT 2010 aircraft, which was an Airbus A319 CJ/LR. The window metrology and spacing, however, is identical to the A321-200
’s we will use for EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE (except where exit row doors interrupt the otherwise uniform spacing of the windows).


C =  53 cm    Inter-window centerline distance
              (most windows; a few have larger inter-window spacings)
L =  30 cm    Clear-area with trim gasket window-length
W =  21 cm    Clear-area with trim gasket window-width
T = 114 cm    Top of window to floor vertical distance
B =  86 cm    Bottom of window (actual surface, not trim) to floor vertical distance
D =   0 cm    Top of window protrusion distance vertical to cabin floor edge [a]
θ = 14 deg    Tilt angle (top inward) of window with respect to vertical [b]

[a] The right panel figure indicates a downward projection of the window top onto the floor is inboard (by a distance D) of bottom of the actually slightly curved wall.
      This is typically actually zero, but the cosmetic wall floor panel may be different in our charter aircraft.
[b] The windows themselves, as mounted on the aircraft fuselage, are tilted inward at the top by approximately 14°.
 
2) WINDOW SHARING. The low vertical angle of the Sun (on the horizontal plane, 3.5°/3.4° above the terrestrial horizon at 39,000/37,000 ft) will greatly facilitate window sharing for those contemplating an observing partner, which can be much more problematic (and contorting!) for high-solar-elevation-angle eclipse flights. To aid in visualization, we have a high-fidelity window template from Airbus that, if you print to actual size, you can tape to a wall following the dimensions above and try for yourself. Click HERE for that template. So the answer to this second question is – yes.  Note that the number of windows accessible to any seat row will vary from 1.0 to 2.0, with some rows providing partial access to a second window.  As a result, some seat rows are more amenable to window-sharing than others.

The EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE  TEAM – Points of Contact and Pedigree


Dr. GLENN SCHNEIDER (Steward Observatory and the Department of Astronomy, The University of Arizona).
EFLIGHT 2021-
SUNRISE, to be launched from Punta Arenas, Chile, will be conducted as an eclipse-optimized EFLIGHT under the technical direction of Dr. Glenn Schneider (this link for eclipse context). The flight will build upon and follow the precepts and procedures developed, tested, and validated on many previous eclipse flights of his design and implementation (see table below) to provide the best views possible of the total phase of the eclipse. Dr. Schneider has observed, and arranged expeditionary travel and coordinated observational logistics for, 35 total solar eclipses around the globe since 1970. He has planned or executed solar eclipse observation flights for 14 TSEs since 1986, most recently EFLIGHT 2019-MAX with approximately 8-1/2 minutes of prolonged totality launched from Easter Island. Umbraphiles with any technical questions regarding EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE are invited to contact Glenn at gschneider@as.arizona.edu. As usual, Dr. Schneider is the technical guy for EFLIGHT planning, implementation, and execution. Questions regarding arrangements for flight participation, bookings, travel logistics, etc., should go to Tim Todd at T.E.I. Tours and Travel (see below). Eclipse enthusiasts (from novice to addicts) are invited to visit Glenn's eclipse web page where details on many of these prior flights, and information on other eclipses and related topics, may be found.

PREVIOUS EFLIGHTS LED/PLANNED BY GLENN SCHNEIDER


TIM TODD (T.E.I. Tours and Travel; http://www.teiglobal.com/; tei@teiglobal.com) has had an avid interest in astronomy since age 12 when, as a schoolboy, he won second prize in a science competition. A short time later he purchased a 3-inch brass refractor telescope in an antique market. Tim saw his first total solar eclipse in Siberia in 1981, and has experienced 14 others since in various locations such as Java, Bolivia, Iran, Soviet Union/Russia, Venezuela, Zambia and the USA with recent special favorites airborne over the Faroes in 2015, and in 2016 an expedition by small boat to the remote Woleai Atoll in Micronesia (western Pacific Ocean). His company, T.E.I. Tours & Travel, is a boutique tour operator specializing in arranging customized tour services for individuals and small groups to destinations worldwide with special interest and expertise in arranging eclipse tours. Starting with a 1981 journey by train from Hong Kong through China and Mongolia to a location near Kemerovo, Siberia, T.E.I. has arranged airborne expeditions ex-Faroe Islands in 2015 and ex-Easter Island (Chile) in 2019, and ground-based eclipse travel in northeast Siberia, Indonesia, Costa Rica, Iran, Vietnam, Venezuela, and Zambia.

JOHN BEATTIE (Project Specialist). What can I say about John – other than he is one of the most passionate people I have ever met when it comes to total solar eclipses (one of the others, self-admittedly, myself). John is tied with me (and Williams College Professor Jay Pasachoff) for standing (or flying) in the Moons umbral shadow 35 times in each of our lives – sometimes sharing eclipse-flight venues – though we have not always been at the same location. It was John who inspired me to take a look a few years ago at what might be possible in detail for an EFLIGHT 2019and so I did (obsessively so, I am sure he would say), and the rest (-MAX) is history. So, if you were on that flight thank John for both the inspiration, and the instigation, AND in contingency and logistics planning issues which he will intuit again for EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE.

Space available for flight participants will be limited by the number of usable passenger windows on the sun-facing (left) side of the aircraft. For specific details click the tinyurl.com link just below.


Technical Questions?


   --> Contact Glenn Schneider

Wanna Join
EFLIGHT 2021-SUNRISE?

See https://tinyurl.com/EFLIGHT2021A from TEI for information on how to secure a space on the flight.
 
 --> Contact Tim Todd at T.E.I. for more details,
 and to reserve an eclipse-viewing seat row.



© 2020-2021, Glenn Schneider
Last update: 24 Apr 2021 17:16 MST

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