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You can make your own solar eclipse viewer box at home, whether with a pinhole projector or a colander. No problem. How to make a handmade solar eclipse view box if you can't find glasses
Cut out the rectangular piece of paper and put it in the cereal box to line the bottom. Cut off the sides of the box top, a third on the left side, a third on the right, leaving the middle third ...
Here is a finished pinhole projector made from a cereal box, a low-budget way to view the April 8 solar eclipse. To make a box pinhole project, gather up the following items:
The HTML markup produced by this template includes an hCalendar microformat, which makes the event details parsable by computers, either acting automatically to catalogue article across Wikipedia, or via a browser tool operated by a person, to (for example) add the subject to a calendar or diary application.
Template:Solar eclipse set 1971–1974; Template:Solar eclipse set 1975–1978; Template:Solar eclipse set 1979–1982; Template:Solar eclipse set 1982–1985; Template:Solar eclipse set 1986–1989; Template:Solar eclipse set 1990–1992; Template:Solar eclipse set 1993–1996; Template:Solar eclipse set 1997–2000; Template:Solar eclipse set ...
Figure 2. Box-plot with whiskers from minimum to maximum Figure 3. Same box-plot with whiskers drawn within the 1.5 IQR value. A boxplot is a standardized way of displaying the dataset based on the five-number summary: the minimum, the maximum, the sample median, and the first and third quartiles.
A handful of household items is all you need to make your own pinhole eclipse viewer: tape, aluminum foil, paper, scissors and (maybe) a cereal box.
Looking at eclipse without proper glasses is dangerous. Luckily, there are DIY options for those who forgot to order a pair in time for April 8.