With over 2,300,000 views on YouTube
alone, the video below, of a solar eclipse recorded from Alaska
Airlines Flight 870 in 2016 is easily one of the most popular recordings
of an eclipse in history. Between the absolutely otherworldly view of
the moon’s shadow, which parts the clouds like it’s the end of the
world, or the giddy, beaming, voice-cracking narration of the unseen man
behind the camera, it’s a contender for greatest eclipse video of all
time. Here’s how it came together.
The man who can be heard screaming “TOTALITY!” and “PROMINENCES!” in the recording is the amateur astronomer Mike Kentrianakis,
a longtime eclipse chaser. In 2016, a colleague told him that a
commercial flight from Anchorage to Honolulu might pass right through
the shadow of a solar eclipse, which immediately intrigued Kentrianakis.
“I’d never seen one from a plane before,” says Kentrianakis.
In 2016, a total solar eclipse took place on March 9,
but you can forgive yourself for not noticing: on land, it was only
visible from a handful of the islands of Southeast Asia. The majority of
the path of totality was in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Not ideal
for eclipse watchers.
About a year before it was scheduled to
occur, Kentrianakis’s friend Joe Rao, himself a meteorologist and
umbraphile, figured out that there was an Alaska Airlines flight leaving
Anchorage on its way to Honolulu that would come very close to the
eclipse’s path of totality over the Pacific. They just had to convince
the airline to change the departure time of the flight.
“We went through the gauntlet of
questions, and suspicions,” says Kentrianakis. “I think they thought we
were a little bit crazy at first, and they really didn’t believe it.”
This was actually the second time Rao had advocated for changing a
flight schedule to accommodate eclipse viewing. Back in 1990, Trans Air
America agreed to delay one of their flights by 41 minutes. This time,
in 2016, Alaska Air eventually did agree to change the departure time of
the flight, since it was so far in advance. One of the airline’s
concerns was that passengers would look out the window into the piercing
rays of the sun and damage their eyes, but Kentrianakis and Rao were
able to convince the airline to go ahead anyhow.
As the 2016 eclipse drew nearer,
Kentrianakis’ anticipation grew. But before he could even think about
promoting the flight as an eclipse experience, it had already sold out
with regular passengers, with only Kentrianakis and a small group of
others booked just to see the moon’s shadow. “A dozen of us were there
to see the eclipse. And we bought the tickets at regular price.”
Initially Kentrianakis had wanted to have
a videographer on the plane to film the event, but after that fell
through, he realized he’d have to do the job himself. “I was reluctant,
because I just wanted to enjoy this thing.”
The night before the flight, Kentrianakis
had dinner with one of the pilots, who he says was just as excited for
the experience as he was. Alaska Airlines Flight 870 left Anchorage at
2:15 p.m. on March 9, 2016, just 25 minutes later than it was originally
scheduled. It swung out over the Pacific Ocean, and flew right into the
shadow of the eclipse, as seen on the video. Kentrianakis can be heard
excitedly describing what he was seeing, but even when recounting the
experience over a year later, he gets worked up all over again. “I went
berserk, because it was just an unbelievable eclipse,” he says. “I’d
never seen anything like that. The contrast, the perfection, the
symmetry. The clarity of the shadow, the circular form. It really
magnified it to see it in a wide-angle view. The shadow was coming
straight at us. It was enormous! It looks like doomsday, but yet,
there’s no fear.”
Kentrianakis says that the other
passengers, who hadn’t come to see the eclipse, were also in awe.
“People are interested in eclipses. In the back of their mind, they know
that they are something special,” he says.
After the flight, Kentrianakis sent the
video around to a few folks, including some old colleagues at CBS News,
but he never expected it to achieve the millions of views and shares
that it did. “In every language they say, ‘Crazy astronomer loses it at
35,000 feet.’”
Following the success and positive publicity generated by the 2016 flight, Alaska Airlines is offering a special flight
through the August 2017 eclipse path. They contacted Kentrianakis about
flying once again but he reluctantly declined. He was recently tapped
by the American Astronomical Society to act as the overall Project
Manager for their run up to the Great American Eclipse on August 21,
2017.
“You can’t be everywhere,
as much as you’d love to be,” he says. Kentrianakis plans on viewing the
2017 eclipse from Carbondale, Illinois, which he’s been planning for
almost two years. But he doesn’t seem to mind having to choose. “That’s
sort of what the eclipse is about. Making decisions and having the one
shot at things.”
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