jsc2017e110798

Photo Date: 08/21/2017
Subject: Photographic Coverage of JSC employees observing the 2017 Solar Eclipse at Johnson Space Center with Dr. William Stefanov, who's part of the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit within Johnson's Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Division.
Location: NASA Johnson Space Center, B3, B8
Photographer: Bill Stafford

jsc2017e110798 (Aug. 21, 2017) --- Employees at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston joined the rest of the country in experiencing the 2017 eclipse on Aug. 21, 2017. Many used protective eclipse glasses, and others made use of manufactured or pin-hole cameras of opportunity to view the eclipse. In Houston, the partial eclipse duration was 2 hours, 59 minutes, reaching its maximum level of 67 percent at 1:17 p.m. CDT. Some members of the team supporting the International Space Station in the Christopher C. Kraft Mission Control Center took advantage of a break in their duties to step outside the windowless building to witness what their colleagues in orbit also saw and documented with a variety of cameras.