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SunSketcher

Our Sun is not quite a perfect sphere. Knowing our Sun’s true shape would give scientists new clues about its mysterious interior and test theories of gravity. But precisely measuring the shape of this enormous nearly-round object has been challenging - until now.

Join the SunSketcher team and help make these measurements during the total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024! You’ll use your phone to photograph Baily’s beads. Baily’s Beads are the last glimmers of sunlight that slip through the valleys of the Moon as it eclipses the Sun and the first rays of sunlight to sneak through the low spots on the other side of the Moon as the Sun re-appears. The SunSketcher app on your smartphone will capture images of these lights during the eclipse.

Anyone in the path of totality with a smartphone is invited to participate on April 8, 2024!

Go to Project Website about SunSketcher

project task

Collecting data with smartphone

Division

Heliophysics

where

Path of April 8, 2024 total eclipse

launched

2023

What you’ll do

  • Be part of an historic effort to measure the shape of the Sun.
  • Enjoy the eclipse while your smartphone collects data for science.
  • Interested in contributing to the data analysis portion of the project? Watch the project website for opportunities!

Requirements

  • Time: 5-10 minutes to download app and read the instructions, plus the time you spend watching the eclipse (typically several minutes). 
  • Equipment: An Android or Apple smartphone running the free SunSketcher app and a tripod or material to position your phone to face the Sun.
  • Knowledge: None. The app provides all necessary instructions.

Get started!

  • Visit the project website and sign up to join our team and be notified when the app is available.
  • Check out the tutorial, available now on the SunSketcher website! (go full screen for best results)
  • Make a plan to be in the path of totality for the April 8, 2024 eclipse - with your phone and the SunSketcher app!
👁 A dark circle in the center with color slivers of light show the movement of the sun during the eclipse.
This image illustrates Baily's Beads - the bright spots of light on the Moon’s edge that are visible at the very beginning and the very end of totality. The Moon’s surface is covered with mountains, valleys, and craters, which make the edge of the Moon bumpy. The low points are the last places where sunlight passes as the Moon covers the Sun in an eclipse. In this picture, multiple images taken in quick succession show that the beads disappear and appear in stages, with only the very deepest valley and craters allowing sunlight to shine through closest to totality. This illustration is composed of a series of images taken from ESO's La Silla Observatory on 2 July 2019 during a total solar eclipse.
Credit P. Horálek/European Southern Observatory; image and caption text from retrieved from https://www.eso.org/public/images/eso1912w/ in October, 2023

Learn More

Read more about the science behind this project on the project’s Research page

Follow @SunSketcher on X, Instagram, and TikTok

SunSketcher is part of the Heliophysics Big Year - follow that link to learn more about this yearlong celebration of heliophysics.