The eclipse will be visible across North America, but set your alarm -- you'll need to stay up late to see it.
A “ring of fire” solar eclipse will be visible on Tuesday, with the best views in Antarctica and partial eclipse views in Africa and South America.
A total lunar eclipse will dazzle skies next month, marking what astronomers are calling one of the best astronomical events ...
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 ...
A “ring of fire” annular solar eclipse will be visible from Antarctica on Feb. 17, 2026, as the new moon sets the stage for ...
Early Tuesday morning, March 3, a total eclipse of the Moon will be visible from throughout the U.S. (and North and America). In a lunar eclipse, the Moon and the Sun are exactly opposite each other ...
Want to see the only total lunar eclipse of 2026? You'll have to get up early in Florida.
On Aug. 12, 2026 — six months from today — a total solar eclipse will bring a brief totality to Europe. Could aurora and ...
On Tuesday, Feb. 17 , the Earth will witness an annular solar eclipse — commonly called a ring of fire .
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 ...
An annular solar eclipse, also known as a "ring of fire" eclipse, was visible in Antarctica, with a partial eclipse observed in the southern tip of South America and across the southeast corner of ...
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 ...