Solar eclipse sparks tourist fever in China
www.chinaview.cn 2009-07-20 23:04:24   Print

    HANGZHOU, July 20 (Xinhua) -- The longest total solar eclipse of this century has triggered tourist fever along China's Yangtze River Valley as astronomy enthusiasts from home and abroad flock there to watch the event on July 22.

    The total eclipse, which lasts as long as six minutes 43 seconds, will be visible along the river valley on Wednesday morning.

    Wang Sichao, an expert with the Purple Mountain Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences based in east China's Nanjing City, said the eclipse will not be surpassed in duration until June 13, 2132.

    "The number of people watching the solar eclipse will make a historical record, since previous solar eclipses can only be best observed in desolate regions," said Wang.

    The total eclipse is expected to begin between 9 a.m. to 9:38 a.m. (Beijing Time), the expert said.

    Viewers in Chinese regions beyond the river valley, including Beijing, can observe a partial eclipse, he added.

    The National Astronomical Observatories has recommended eight sites in eastern China that the agency believes are the best places to view the event.

    Among the sites is Jiaxing, a city in Zhejiang province.

    All the hotels and inns in Jiaxing are fully booked by eclipse watchers, 6,000 of whom traveled from abroad, said Zhou Hongxia, deputy director of the local tourism administration.

    "The number could be much bigger on Wednesday," she said. "Many of the watchers started to book rooms more than a year ago."

    The city is under severe pressure as it strives to accommodate the influx of visitors, traffic, emergency care and translators.

    Local authorities are also working to ensure against A/H1N1 flu outbreaks and to avoid traffic jams and stampedes.

    Nearly 3,000 astronomy enthusiasts from Japan, the United States and Europe have also flocked to central province of Hubei, the provincial tourism administration said Monday.

    The crowd brings the number of foreign visitors to about 10 times more than the same period last year, a manager at a local travel agency told Xinhua.

    About 500 visitors even rented a football pitch at a local college to better view the eclipse, said Cao Fushan, director of the provincial administration's general office.

    As astronomy lovers around the world flood China for the solar eclipse, the National Meteorological Center Monday warned of rain and heavy cloud cover in the area where the total eclipse will be most visible.

    Thundershowers or thick clouds may overcast many cities in the Yangtze River Valley, including Shanghai, Chongqing and Wuhan as well as the eight sites with the best views recommended by the National Astronomical Observatories, according to local weather stations.

    National Astronomical Observatories have placed a number of live studios within the totality path. In the worst case, people can watch the scene via live coverage on TV or on the Internet.

Rain, clouds may cast shadow on China's total solar eclipse viewing

    BEIJING, July 20 (Xinhua) -- As astronomy lovers around the world flood China for the July 22 solar eclipse, the country's National Meteorological Center Monday warned of rain and heavy cloud cover in the area where the total eclipse will be most visible.

Photo taken on July 11, 2009 shows the sketch maps illustrating the whole process of the full solar eclipse during a popular science exhibition on the introduction to the forthcoming 2009 Full Solar Eclipse at the Shanghai Science & Technology Museum in Shanghai, east China. The upcoming full solar eclipse, predicted to betide on July 22 and believed to be the longest of its kind in 500 years, will be visible in most parts of the Shanghai Municipality.(Xinhua)
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    Thundershowers or thick clouds may overcast many cities in the Yangtze River Valley, including Shanghai, Chongqing and Wuhan as well as the eight sites with the best views recommended by the National Astronomical Observatories, according to local weather stations. Full story

State Council urges preparations for inconveniences, bad impact brought by coming solar eclipse

   BEIJING, July 19 (Xinhua) -- The General Office of the State Council, China's Cabinet, has urged relevant departments to get fully prepared to cope with possible inconveniences and bad impact caused by a full solar eclipse which is forecasted to occur on Wednesday.

    In a statement issued late Saturday night, the General Office called on departments of transport, railways and civil aviation, to make full preparations to guarantee smooth and safe transportation and passenger flow. It also urged meteorological departments to intensify weather monitoring and issue timely weather report, especially forecast of disaster weather. Full story

China to live broadcast longest total solar eclipse worldwide

   BEIJING, July 17 (Xinhua) -- Worldwide audience will be able to watch the longest solar eclipse in China in this century through TV, Internet and mobile phones on July 22, said the Chinese Academy of Sciences(CAS) National Astronomical Observatories (NAOC) here Friday.

    Four stations for live broadcasting will be set up in Chongqing, Wuhan, Hangzhou and Shanghai cities, where the total eclipse can be observed, said Hao Jinxin, NAOC deputy director. Full story

Eclipse shines on tourism

    BEIJING, July 17 -- Travel agencies, hotels, airlines and even online vendors are cashing in on the longest solar eclipse of the 21st century, which will pass across China next Wednesday.

    The July 22 eclipse, which will last up to six minutes, the longest until the year 2132, has become the promotional tag line for the tourism industry in cities along the Yangtze River, including Shanghai, Suzhou and Wuhan.Full story 

Editor: Mu Xuequan
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