fbpx

What looking at the solar eclipse without glasses could do to your eyes

By admin

Apr 10, 2019

Solar Eclipse. The moon moving in front of the sun. Illustration

Let’s get this out of the way: You cannot safely watch the solar eclipse without wearing protective glasses.

 

If you aren’t wearing protective glasses, ultraviolet light from the sun can penetrate and be absorbed into your retina, causing a condition that eye doctors call solar retinopathy.

 

Many people are aware of that, but there are still some myths out there about what happens to people who have looked at an eclipse without protection.

 

Contrary to what some warnings make it sound like, solar retinopathy doesn’t necessarily leave people blind. For most people, the damage affects central vision and may make it blurry or spotty. In some cases, that damage goes away after a few days, weeks, or months. But in others, that damage is permanent.

 

And it’s all because of the power of the sun and the way an eclipse can cloud our judgment.

 

The sun is powerful enough that direct exposure to its light can damage your eyes or your camera sensor if you point a zoom lens directly at it.

 

Most of the time, we instinctively don’t let ourselves look at the sun — the brightness causes us to blink or look away, which is why solar-retinopathy cases are mostly associated with eclipse events. (There have been other cases when people engaged in sun-gazing rituals or tripped on LSD and were captivated by the sun’s brilliance.)

 

During an eclipse where the sun isn’t covered by the moon, our star’s brightness decreases significantly. Suddenly, it’s not painful to look at the sun, either because it’s much less bright or because our fascination overrides our pain reflex.

 

Either way, that decrease is deceptive. The sun is still emitting enough ultraviolet light that it could damage your eyes within seconds.

 

“We were just doing it for a short time,” Lou Tomososki, 70, told “Today” of himself and a friend sneaking a peek at an eclipse in Oregon in 1962. “I have a little blind spot in the center of my right eye.”

 

That doesn’t mean everyone who has ever glanced at an eclipse has lost their vision. Solar retinopathy is difficult to predict. Ophthalmologists and optometrists reliably expect to see a few cases of it after an eclipse, according to Medscape.

 

Usually, people whose eyes are damaged notice a change within a few hours or by the next day — though it’s worth pointing out that cumulative damage by ultraviolet light over your lifetime can result in eye problems later.

 

According to NASA, symptoms usually include blurred vision, seeing dark or yellow spots, pain, or losing vision in the center of the eye. That can make it hard or impossible to read or to focus on whatever is in the center of your view.

 

Some lucky people’s vision recovers within a day — though, again, it doesn’t mean there isn’t damage to the eye, and they could still have problems later. In general, people recover as much as they ever will within six months of the event, according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology.

 

If you are within the 70-mile-wide band of totality, you can safely remove your protective glasses once the sun is covered. You’ll know it’s time because you won’t be able to see anything with those glasses on. But as soon as beads of light start to reappear, it’s time to protect your eyes again. Even 1% of the sun is enough to cause damage.

 

If you can’t find eclipse glasses, we’d recommend making a simple pinhole camera to watch safely.

 

Credits: Business Insider

0 Comments