2024 Solar Eclipse When Is the Next Solar Eclipse? Stream the Great American Solar Eclipse How to View the Solar Eclipse Why People Will See Mind-Blowing Colors on April 8 The Path of Totality for the Solar Eclipse Build a DIY Eclipse Viewer in Minutes ...
A Total Solar Eclipse is the most spectacular thing but seeing one takes planning. WhenIstheNextEclipse.com is your complete resource
NASA says the nexttotal solar eclipsevisible from the U.S. will take place seven years from now, on April 8, 2024. But the next full coast-to-coast eclipse won't appear until 2045. During the 2024 eclipse, themoon's shadow will cross the U.S. borderin southern Texas and move up i...
After the April 8, 2024 eclipse, the next total solar eclipse visible from the contiguous United States will be on Aug. 23, 2044. If you’re from another part of the world, though—or you’re willing to travel—you’ll be able to see a total solar eclipse in Greenland, Iceland, Por...
Solar eclipse 2025: Live updates The next solar eclipse will be a partial eclipse in March 2025. Here's what you need to know. First solar eclipse of 2025 The first solar eclipse of 2025 will occur on March 29. It is a partial solar eclipse visible over parts of Europe, Asia, Africa...
Iceland or Spain to catch this eclipse. Greenland and Iceland are the best option as Spain will only get the eclipse toward the end of the day. Next up is 2027 when an eclipse takes place on the 2 August visible from North Africa. After that, it’s 2028 but for southern hemisphere ob...
This eclipse in 2030 will occur mostly at sea, but it will cross two continents and be visible to almost 11 million people. Totality will occur shortly after the sun rises on Namibia's Skeleton Coast before moving across Botswana to Durban on the east coast of South Africa. The moon's sh...
For a few minutes in April of 2024, East Texas will go dark during the day as the sun is covered up by the moon.
Our calendar here tells you the date and time for the next full Moon and all the full Moons for this year and next. Learn the names ...
the sun from our perspective. The sun, Earth and the moon are aligned, but because the moon’s orbit is not exactly in the same plane as Earth’s orbit around the sun, they rarely form a perfect line. When they do, we have alunar eclipseas Earth's shadow crosses the moon's face....