How Total Solar Eclipses Point to Purpose and Divine Design in the Universe

By Jay Richards Published on April 5, 2024

Has it ever occurred to you that the sun and the moon are not just the same shape, but the same apparent size in the sky? Itโ€™s this happy arrangement that produces total solar eclipses seen from the earthโ€™s surface.

Americans will get a chance to see such an eclipse on Monday โ€” an event we wonโ€™t see again from coast to coast until 2045. The moonโ€™s 115-mile wide central shadow will enter Texas from Mexico around 12:29 p.m. over Eagle Pass before grazing the edge of San Antonio, and then passing over Dallas-Ft. Worth. It will continue on a northeasterly pass over 11 other states until it reaches Maine. (You can get the precise details at NationalEclipse.com.)

In a total solar eclipse, just before โ€œtotality,โ€ the last bright bit of the sunโ€™s photosphere looks like a pink diamond in an engagement ring. When the moon covers the sunโ€™s disk, the sky goes dark; the temperature drops; the stars appear. Bugs and animals get confused and go quiet or start squawking. And the dim outer atmosphere of the sun, the corona, reaches out from the black lunar disk like the gray iris of an eye with a black pupil in the middle. At that point you can take off your protective glasses and see it with your naked eyes.

Astronomer Guillermo Gonzalez (my coauthor on The Privileged Planet) and I will be providing live commentary for an eclipse viewing in Waxahachie, Texas, south of Dallas โ€” where totality will last four minutes and 19 seconds. (You can tune in on X @DiscoveryCSC.)

In order for a total solar eclipse to occur, the moon, sun, and Earth have to line up in a straight line. When the moon passes in front of the sun, you can see an eclipse if youโ€™re in the path of the moonโ€™s shadow.

Those fully in the shadow โ€” the umbra โ€” see the moon cover the sun. If youโ€™re just outside that path, you see a partial eclipse โ€” the penumbra. The difference between a partial and total eclipse is like the difference between day and night. Itโ€™s impossible to capture with mere words the experience of seeing a total eclipse. But words can help us ponder its meaning.

Finely Tuned

The sun is a giant ball of gas and plasma. The moon is a much smaller rock. And yet, during a total eclipse, they mark off the same space in our sky. They match. On Earth, we can see not just total eclipses, but what we might call perfect solar eclipses.

The moon is about 400 times smaller than the sun. But the moon is also about 400 times closer to the earth than is the sun. As a result, the size of the moon matches the size of the sun from our perspective. And since they appear as round disks, they match in both size and shape.

Physics doesnโ€™t require this arrangement. There are 65 major moons in our solar system and many smaller ones. But only we enjoy perfect solar eclipses when a moon just barely covers the sunโ€™s bright photosphere. If there were life forms on Mars or Jupiter, they wouldnโ€™t see such eclipses.

So the best place to view total solar eclipses in our solar system is just where there are observers to see them. Let that sink in a minute.

A Habitable Planet

Most astronomers chalk this up to coincidence. And yet, without this precise arrangement of the earth, the moon, and the sun, we probably wouldnโ€™t exist.

Let me explain. For lots of reasons, a planet almost surely needs liquid water on its surface to host complex life. Almost all places in the solar system and in the universe are either way too hot or way too cold for this. To be โ€œhabitable,โ€ a planet needs to be in the โ€œGoldilocks Zoneโ€ around its star: not too hot and not too cold. Think of this zone as a narrow, nearly circular ring of space around a star. (Netflixโ€™s Three-Body Problem is fun science fiction, but any planet in a three-star system would almost surely be lifeless.)

The earth is, of course, safely inside the Goldilocks Zone. And as a result, the sun appears to be a certain size in our sky.

Our large, well-placed moon also plays a key role in making Earth habitable by stabilizing the tilt of its axis. That gives our planet a more stable climate. The moon also contributes to Earthโ€™s ocean tides, which mix nutrients from the land into the oceans. The two tiny moons around Mars are much too small to serve in this role. As a result, Mars wobbles on its axis far more than the earth does. Thatโ€™s bad news for Martians.

Now put these two facts together.

  1. When a planet, like Earth, is in the cozy, life-friendly zone around a star, that star will appear to be a certain size in its sky.
  2. A habitable planet like Earth also needs to have a moon of a certain size in its sky to create the right amount of gravitational pull to stabilize the planet.

Not just โ€œcertainโ€ sizes, but nearly the same apparent sizes. So, two of the key ingredients for building a habitable planet also produce perfect eclipses for observers on that planet.

Our Eclipses Are a Gold Mine for Science

That alone seems fishy. But thereโ€™s more: Our ability to see perfect solar eclipses has played a pivotal role in several major scientific discoveries. Those discoveries would have been hard to make on the planets that donโ€™t enjoy such eclipses.

First, eclipses helped us unlock the mystery of stars.

Scientists since Isaac Newton (1666) have known that sunlight splits into all the colors of the rainbow when passed through a prism. But only in the nineteenth century did astronomers begin to observe solar eclipses with spectroscopes, which use prisms. This allowed them to discover how the sun produces its light.

The beginning and end of totality present the best chances to examine the thin middle layer of the sunโ€™s atmosphere, called the chromosphere. It shines in the ruby-red light of hydrogen gas heated to more than 20,000ยฐ Celsius (36,000ยฐ Fahrenheit). Just beyond the moonโ€™s silhouette during an eclipse, observers may also see solar prominences: brilliant red arcs, loops, and jets of hot gas propelled by the explosive release of the sunโ€™s magnetic energy.

All of this gave astronomers a way to figure out the structure of the sun itself. Since the sun looks larger from the earth than from any other planet with a moon, we can discern finer details in its chromosphere and corona than we could from any other planet.

This knowledge, in turn, has allowed astronomers to make sense of the light from the distant stars. Perfect eclipses, then, have been a key that allowed us to unlock the physics of stars.

Testing Einsteinโ€™s Theory

Eclipses have done far more than help astronomers decipher starlight, however.

In the early twentieth century, Albert Einstein predicted in his General Theory of Relativity that light passing near a massive object like the sun would be visibly bent. To test his theory, astronomers needed to measure the changes in the positions of starlight passing near the sunโ€™s edge compared to their positions months later when the sun was in another part of the sky.

Have you ever tried to look at starlight right next to the edge of the sun? Itโ€™s a bad idea and wouldnโ€™t work anyway. The test could only be done during a total solar eclipse. Thatโ€™s why, during the 1919 eclipse, two teams of astronomers set out to confirm Einsteinโ€™s theory.

They succeeded, as did other astronomers during later eclipses. This led scientists to embrace Einsteinโ€™s theory, which is the basis of our current knowledge of the universe.

Conspiracy, Not Coincidence

Thereโ€™s far more to this story. Indeed, the perfect eclipses we enjoy are just one of many examples of an eerie pattern Gonzalez and I discuss in detail in The Privileged Planet. That pattern points to a startling conclusion: Life-friendly places like Earth are also the best places, overall, for doing science. That is, the rare places where observers can exist are also the best overall places for observing. The universe seems to be designed not just for life but also for discovery.

Genesis 1 says that God created lights in the sky for โ€œsigns.โ€ One of those signs has been hiding in plain sight all along.

 

Jay W. Richards, Ph.D., is editor-at-large with The Stream. He is also the William E. Simon senior research fellow in The Heritage Foundationโ€™s DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society, where he focuses on protecting life, marriage, and religious liberty, and a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute. His most recent book, coauthored with LIFE Outreach International Founder and President James Robison, is Fight the Good Fight: How an Alliance of Faith and Reason Can Win the Culture War.

Like the article? Share it with your friends! And use our social media pages to join or start the conversation! Find us on Facebook, X, Instagram, MeWe and Gab.

Inspiration
The Good Life
Katherine Wolf
More from The Stream
Connect with Us