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March 29, 2025 solar eclipse times Event Time (UTC) First penumbral external contact 2025 March 29 at 08:51:52.5 UTC Greatest eclipse 2025 March 29 at 10:48:36.1 UTC Ecliptic conjunction 2025 March 29 at 10:58:59.4 UTC Equatorial conjunction 2025 March 29 at 11:47:27.0 UTC Last penumbral external contact 2025 March 29 at 12:44:54.0 UTC
This is a list of solar eclipses visible from the United States between 1901 and 2100. All eclipses whose path of totality or annularity passes through the land territory of the current fifty U.S. states and the District of Columbia are included. All types of solar eclipses, whether recent, upcoming, or in the past, are also included.
"The good news is that the weather will be dry and cooperative across much of the United States as the last minutes of 2024 wind down and the first moments of 2025 begin," said AccuWeather ...
The total solar eclipse is mere hours away, and local forecasts in 15 states along the so-called path of totality suggest that viewing the highly anticipated celestial event may be a problem for ...
For the first time since 2022, a total lunar eclipse will cause the moon to turn red as it passes through the Earth's shadow. Unlike a total solar eclipse that is visible from only a small area ...
A partial solar eclipse will occur at the Moon’s descending node of orbit on Sunday, September 21, 2025, [1] with a magnitude of 0.855. A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between the Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partly obscuring the image of the Sun for a viewer on Earth.
The shadow will be traveling at an average of about 2,300 miles per hour across NY state and will only take about 10 minutes, from one side of state to the other.
Each time a notable solar eclipse is visible from Central Ohio, several thousand pairs of eclipse glasses are distributed and educational school programs scheduled. Ed Krupp, Director of Griffith Observatory and John Dobson, inventor of the Dobsonian telescope, have both visited and lectured at Ohio Wesleyan thanks to Perkins sponsorship.)