Opening up the eclipse to blind people – for NYT

Words by Simón Posada for The New York Times.

Nancy Stella Quenguán, a leader of the visually impaired community in Palmira, Colombia, remembers an eclipse that occurred in 1991.

“Having lost my vision two years earlier, I sensed the hens seeking their nests and the weather turning cooler,” she said. “As light returned, birds sang as if welcoming dawn.”

Eugenio Obando, who studies psychology at the National University of Colombia at Palmira, remembers seeing the blurry circle of the moon in his childhood. Now, with deteriorating vision, he can perceive only hints of brightness from the sun.

Neither Ms. Quenguán nor Mr. Obando could see the eclipse with their eyes. But on Saturday, they and hundreds of other people gathered to experience it with a device that translates light into sound, in a process known as sonification.

The device, called LightSound, produces variable beeping sounds, which slow in frequency during the darkest minutes of an eclipse and increase as daylight returns.

Continue reading: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2023/10/14/science/solar-eclipse-2023/opening-up-the-eclipse-to-people-who-cannot-see-it?smid=url-share

Picture of Jair Coll

Jair Coll

Jaír F. Coll (B. 1997) is a Colombian documentary photographer who explores belonging and resilience in marginalized communities. He is based in the city of Cali, but has covered news and stories for international media and foreign aid agencies.

More Stories

Medellín – ‘Best of the World 2025’ for National Geographic

Once enemies, today they build for Colombia’s dead – Published in EL PAÍS

Terrorist attack in Cali, Colombia – for Reuters and El País