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A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partially obscuring Earth's view of the Sun. The shadows of solar eclipses often cross the Australian continent due to its large area of over 7.6 million square kilometers.
A second partial solar eclipse will arrive six months later, on September 21, but only a few lucky nations across Oceania — including New Zealand, Fiji and a small part of Australia — and ...
The next eclipse after this one to shade American soil will be 20 years later on August 23, 2044. ... At least some portion of Australia is touched by a total solar eclipse five times in the span ...
Later that same year, Australia, Antarctica, the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean will be treated to a partial eclipse. 2026 Feb. 17, 2026 — Annular solar eclipse
A total solar eclipse will be visible across Australia, including Sydney, and New Zealand. [2] Sydney will not see another total solar eclipse until June 3, 2858. (Eclipse predictions by Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC) [3] 2028 October 26 Asteroid (35396) 1997 XF 11 will pass 930,000 km (0.0062 AU) from the Earth. 2029
The central line of the path of the eclipse will cross the Australian continent from the Kimberley region in the north-west and continue in a south-easterly direction through Western Australia, the Northern Territory, south-west Queensland and New South Wales, close to the towns of Wyndham, Kununurra, Tennant Creek, Birdsville, Bourke and Dubbo ...
The cosmic double-header will repeat in September with an even longer total lunar eclipse over Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia, and a partial solar eclipse two weeks later near the bottom of the world. SUPERMOONS. Three supermoons are on tap this year in October, November and December.
The first total lunar eclipse will be visible between March 13-14 and cross over Western Europe, parts of Asia, parts of Australia, western Africa, North and South America, and Antarctica.