Why is the path of totality so small during an eclipse.

382 viewsOtherPlanetary Science

Had someone (not a flat earther but someone who questions everything) hold an egg up to a globe, and shine a light behind it. No matter the angle, the shadow would not get extremely smaller than the egg. How is a huge moon casting such a small dark shadow during the eclipse, specificallythe path of totality? I know there’s an explanation, but could you so I can go explain to him like he’s 1?

Thanks!!!

In: Planetary Science

6 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s a matter of scale. If you don’t have sizes & distances that are all scaled the same, then you’ll get results that don’t reflect reality.

You are viewing 1 out of 6 answers, click here to view all answers.