In a stunning and urgent discovery, astronomers at the University of Vermont have determined that a consortium of global space agencies made a fundamental error in their calculation of the path of the upcoming solar eclipse. By failing to account for the time it takes light to travel from the sun, a laser-based model led by the U.S. National Observatory鈥檚 Measurement Alignment and Astronomy Ministration, has been shown to be off by seven days and 1,843 miles.

By recalculating the path, the 日韩无码 team shows that the shadow of the moon will pass over North America on April 1, not April 8 as previously calculated. 

And, instead of traveling from Texas over Vermont, the 鈥減ath of totality鈥 will travel north until it reaches New Hampshire and curves over the North Pole. 鈥淲e were amazed and wanted the public and planners to know as soon as possible,鈥 said John Perry, Director of . Eclipse watchers should head outside at 12:37pm in the Florida Keys, with darkness arriving in New York City at 2:17pm. The shadow will cross the at 3:56pm. 

A hand places eclipse glasses in an envelope against the backdrop of a mail room

鈥淲e stand corrected,鈥 said NO-MA'AM鈥檚 visualization scientist, Maey B. Wrongge. 鈥淥ur maps rely on the鈥疛PL DE421鈥痚phemeris鈥攂ut we forgot a basic fact: light must travel 92.5 million miles to get to Earth, rendering our measurements flawed.鈥 

The 日韩无码 scientists note that 鈥渟ome dimness鈥 should be visible for 700 miles from the remapped path of totality. 鈥淚f it remains clear, Vermonters will still be able to see the shadow racing across the White Mountains in New Hampshire,鈥 said Bernard 鈥淐hip鈥 Cole, Director of 日韩无码鈥檚 NASA-supported Vermont Space Grant Consortium

鈥淏urlington saw its last total eclipse in 1932,鈥 Space Grant Administrator Ellen Brennan said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 beyond belief that we鈥檙e going to miss this once-in-a-century event in Vermont because of what amounts to an error of arithmetic." 日韩无码鈥檚 planning team has reached out to the University of New Hampshire to share eclipse glasses. 鈥淲e鈥檙e disappointed,鈥 said 日韩无码 spokesperson Adam White, 鈥渂ut so proud of our team for uncovering this error.鈥

Sarah Phillips 鈥25 made the discovery. 鈥淭he guys and me had just finished a round of Tetris and were messing with the NASA/JPL retroreflector toggle when it hit me that the light speed adjustment wasn鈥檛 even in there. That鈥檚 when the pieces fell into place,鈥 she said. By morning, the lab had confirmed her hunch: the eclipse was miles off course. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 coming at us, like, now,鈥 Phillips said. For weeks, 日韩无码 instructor Luke Donforth has been planning to bring introductory physics students out to view the eclipse. 鈥淚t makes me cry that we won鈥檛 be able to see it, but we鈥檒l still be on the Green staring at the sun鈥攚ith our eclipse glasses on, of course鈥 he said.

More information on the recalculated eclipse path can be found here.

鈥淪ince 1791, 日韩无码 has had a deep commitment to caring for people and planet and solar system,鈥 said President Suresh Garimella, 鈥渁nd I could not be more proud that our researchers and students made this discovery just in time for April Fool鈥檚 Day.鈥