“…It also provides a unique opportunity for meteorologists to study the response of the atmosphere or biosphere to the sudden turn off/turn on of the incidental solar radiation during and after the solar eclipse. There are a number of studies and observations made during the solar eclipses (Nymphas et al, 2009, and references therein) which include observations of meteorological parameters, such as wind speed and direction, air temperature, atmospheric pressure, humidity (Anderson et al, 1972;Szalowski, 2002;Dolas et al, 2002;Krishnan et al, 2004;Nymphas et al, 2009), gravity waves (Chimonas and Hines, 1971;Singh et al, 1989;Zerefos et al, 2007), ozone measurements (Chakrabarty et al, 1997;Zerefos et al, 2000;Tzanis et al, 2008) and heat and momentum fluxes within the boundary layer (Krishnan et al, 2004). The impact of a solar eclipse on atmospheric and surface temperature has been widely reported in the literatures (Kolarz et al, Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union.…”