From 2026 to 2028, Earth will see a double eclipse cascade: three total solar eclipses and three annular solar eclipses.
Feb. 17's annular solar eclipse occurred as the lunar disk slipped between the sun and Earth during its new moon phase. The ...
A total solar eclipse in April 2024 stunned millions across the United States.
Annular solar eclipse on February 17, 2026: exact times of partial phases and peak ring of fire, visibility areas, path of annularity, and upcoming eclipse dates.
Early on Tuesday, Feb. 26, a rare annular solar eclipse created a “ring of fire” over Antarctica, while South Africa and ...
The next total solar eclipse is expected on Aug. 12, 2026, but it will only appear in North America as a partial solar eclipse, NASA stated on its website. Greenland, Iceland, Spain, Russia, and a ...
A solar eclipses is often a cause for celebration, with everyone in its path stepping outside to glimpse the rare cosmic event of the moon passing directly in front of the sun. The solar eclipse ...
Learn when and where to follow the Feb. 17 ring of fire solar eclipse, with key timings, viewing details, and safety tips ...
A total solar eclipse happens when the planets align so that, from the Earth, the Moon moves in front of the Sun. That can lead to a dramatic vision of the Sun being blocked out in the sky, as well as ...
Plus NOAA's GOES-19 satellite spies the lunar disk crossing the face of our parent star.
An annular solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes between the sun and the Earth without completely covering the sun.
Images obtained from South Korean GEO-KOMPSAT-2A show a warm shadow darkening Antarctica.