Serendipitous observation of a coronal mass ejection during the total solar eclipse of 14 December 2020
Guillermo Abramson

TL;DR
During the 2020 total solar eclipse, a coronal mass ejection was serendipitously observed, with photographic data used to analyze its dimensions and propagation over a few minutes.
Contribution
First observation of a coronal mass ejection during a solar eclipse with detailed photographic characterization of its dimensions and movement.
Findings
CME observed propagating during eclipse
Photographic data enabled dimension analysis
CME front displacement tracked over minutes
Abstract
We report observations of the total solar eclipse of 14 December 2020, during which a coronal mass ejection can be see n propagating. A comprehensive set of photographs covering a high dynamic range of exposure allow to characterize its dimensions. The displacement of the front can be seen occurring during the few minutes of totality.
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