These 3 Toronto students chased the solar eclipse all the way to Oregon - Action News
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These 3 Toronto students chased the solar eclipse all the way to Oregon

Astronomy buff Adiv Paradise and two friends drove 4,000 kilometres to catch a glimpse of the celestial event at the home of Paradise's grandfather in Corvallis, Oregon where Paradise's love of the heavens first took root.

The University of Toronto astronomy students didn't want to miss a 'once in a lifetime' chance

From left to right, University of Toronto astronomy students Andrey Vayner, 25, Adiv Paradise, 24, and Jason Leung, 28, have set up to watch Monday's eclipse on the deck of Paradise's grandfather which they travelled 4,000 kilometres to reach. (Supplied by Adiv Paradise)

John Byrne sat his grandchild down, flicked off the lights and beamed a flashlight at the globe in front of him. As Byrne turned the model Earth,explaining to the small boy the phases of the moon, AdivParadise stared in wonder.

It's a feeling that never quite left Paradise, who's been marvelling at the mechanics of the universe ever since those childhood lessons. Now, nearly two decades later, the University of Toronto astronomy student has travelled some 4,000 kilometres to his grandfather's Oregon home, ready to witness the motion of heavenly bodies with his own eyes.

"I've always liked looking at the stars. It's a way to understand how the world works, and what our place is in the universe," Paradise said.

Paradise's grandfather, a scientist himself, lives in Corvallis, Oregon, where Paradise is now staying. "It's convenientlyin the path of totality," Paradise said, explaining why he loaded his car with a tent and two similarly curious friends, also astronomy students and drove across the continent for a show that, at its most enthralling, will last only a few minutes.

"It's a once-in-a-lifetime thing," he said.

The trio carved their own path across North America to reach Oregon, passing through 10 states in six days, stopping in national forests to photograph the star-smattered night sky.

The road tripwas a first experience for Jason Leung, but the 28-year-old hasglimpsed an eclipse before, in 1998. Clouds thwarted the experience that day, and Leung says he's been waiting 20 years for another chance.

"It was something I really couldn't turn down," he said.

It's not Jason Leung's first eclipse, but it was his first cross-country road trip. (Supplied by Adiv Paradise)

The eclipse chasers have high hopes for clear skies, but Paradise says even if Monday morning brings cloudy weather, the eclipse would still be "quite astounding."

"When totalitybegins, you lose an enormous amount of sunlight. It gets very, very dark. The stars come out, birds go to sleep," he said.

"Even people who think they're not going to cry have an emotional response," he added. "We'll see. For me, whenever I get any kind of experience that gives me a sense of the scale of the world we live in, the solar system, the universe, that's an emotional experience. This should be no different."

Paradise, a teaching assistant,now brings a globeto his own astronomy classes, inspired by his grandfather's lessons. "It does seem to help," he admits. "The phases of the moon are one of the most misunderstood topics we teach."

Monday's eclipse willbe a first for Byrne, now 89,who'll belooking to the sky from his deck as the moon begins to creep in front of the sun's corona, his grandsonbeside him no doubt wearing the same look of awe he first shared with Byrne all those years ago.

"He was a smart little kid. Always had his nose in a book," Byrne recalled, pride in his voice. "He's working on his doctorate now. That's gratifying."