An AI-generated image of an eclipse, but it's a crab, not the moon. (Technical.ly/Alanah Nichole Davis)
An AI-generated image of an eclipse, but it's a crab, not the moon. (Technical.ly/Alanah Nichole Davis)

Sun, your corona is showing!

And no, not the beer with the little golden crown, but the outermost part of the actual sun’s atmosphere.

Unfortunately, Baltimore won’t be in the path of totality on April 8, so the sun’s corona won’t be totally visible from here.

However, Baltimoreans can still enjoy the solar eclipse from places like the Maryland Science Center, which is offering a watch party for this year’s eclipse.

Val Sullivan, the Inner Harbor-based institution’s marketing manager, said that the Maryland Science Center organized festivities to both prepare for and witness the partial eclipse.

Read more at Technical.ly