Can a solar eclipse blind you? Get to know 5 popular eclipse myths before April 8

The solar eclipse is just over a month away and the astral wonder is set to dazzle skywatchers across the country.

The eclipse will cast a 115-mile wide path of totality across North America, temporarily covering hundreds of cities and towns in darkness.

Humanity has taken strides in understanding the relationship between the sun, moon and Earth but certain ideas around the intersection of the three seem to stubbornly remain.

"Some older ideas seem remarkably resistant to replacement by the more scientifically-correct explanations," NASA said ahead of the 2017 eclipse.

Here are five myths about solar eclipses and the explanations for them.

Solar eclipses don't (usually) blind people

Once the eclipse reaches totality, the visible corona emits electromagnetic radiation that can appear with a green hue, according to NASA.

The coronal light is not able to blind a person who is looking at it as it crosses over 90 million miles of space before reaching Earth.

If you stare at the sun before or after totality you will see the sun's surface and the light may cause retinal damage. NASA says that it is human instinct to look away before it does.

Delicate streamers in the sun's corona surround the totally eclipsed sun during the Aug. 21, 2017, total solar eclipse. Observers along a narrow track from Mexico to Maine should have a similar view on April 8, 2024.
Delicate streamers in the sun's corona surround the totally eclipsed sun during the Aug. 21, 2017, total solar eclipse. Observers along a narrow track from Mexico to Maine should have a similar view on April 8, 2024.

Solar eclipses don't do damage during pregnancy

While the sun's corona does emit electromagnetic radiation seen as light, the radiation does not harm pregnant women, according to NASA.

A form of radiation called neutrinos reach the Earth from the sun on a daily basis and pass through the moon during an eclipse. The neutrinos do not cause harm to people.

You can see solar eclipses at the poles

It would be fair to assume that eclipses would be hard to view from the North and South Poles, however NASA says that there is not anything particularly special about the poles when it comes to eclipses.

Santa's neck of the woods saw a total eclipse on March 20, 2015 at the same time as the Spring Equinox. The South Pole saw a total eclipse on November 23, 2003.

Solar eclipses are not omens

Cultures throughout time have tied negative superstitions to the solar eclipse.

Multiple cultures tied the sun's disappearance to it being consumed by a monster or other evil being.

The deaths of notable people close to eclipses — including French Emperor Louis the Pious on May 5, 840 and the Prophet Mohammad's son Ibrahim on Jan. 27, 632 — further tied negative beliefs to the astral event.

However these associations are caused by confirmation bias according to NASA, which the American Psychological Association defines as, "the tendency to look for information that supports, rather than rejects, one’s preconceptions."

Confirmation bias also explains the tendency to tie astrological forecasts to the eclipse.

The moon does not turn entirely black during a solar eclipse

While photographs of the moon during the eclipse show a completely black disk, NASA says that you may still be able to see the moon's surface during an eclipse.

The moon can be illuminated by earthshine or light reflecting off the earth. There is enough earthshine to see the surface of the moon faintly, according to NASA.

See the path of the total eclipse

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Solar eclipses come with a lot of myths, assumptions: Don't buy these