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---
slug: solar-eclipse
title: "Solar Eclipse: Old Man Shakes Fist at Moon"
date: "2024-04-08T22:35:08-04:00"
pics:
dashboard:
css: "image"
tip: "Solar dashboard with eclipse time highlighted."
sources:
- "/files/posts/solar-eclipse/eclipse-ate-our-solar-20240408.webp"
- src: "/files/posts/solar-eclipse/eclipse-ate-our-solar-20240408.png"
width: 845
height: 624
---
Today's solar eclipse took a healthy bite out of our solar energy
production for the day. According to [the details on
timeanddate.com][timeanddate-eclipse], the partial eclipse in our area
lasted from 2:04 pm until 4:32 pm (Eastern).
Those times line up perfectly with the dip shown on our dashboard:
[{{< pe-figure "dashboard" >}}][dashboard]
Unfortunately we couldn't find our solar eclipse glasses, so we had to
fall back to [ye olde pinhole method][pinhole].
**Update (2024-04-09):** Several comments on [this Ars Technica
article][ars-eclipse] also show dips in solar energy production.
[timeanddate-eclipse]: https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/in/usa/washington-dc?iso=20240408
"Solar eclipse details on timeanddate.com"
[dashboard]: /files/posts/solar-eclipse/eclipse-ate-our-solar-20240408.png
"Solar dashboard with eclipse time highlighted."
[pinhole]: https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/make-pinhole-projector.html
"Solar eclipse pinhole projector."
[ars-eclipse]: https://arstechnica.com/science/2024/04/moments-of-totality-how-ars-experienced-the-eclipse/
"Moments of Totality: How Ars experienced the eclipse (arstechica.com)"
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