The next annular solar eclipse will occur on Feb. 17, 2026.
A partial solar eclipse will occur over the weekend, but it will only be visible depending on where you are in the world, according to NASA. The eclipse, which will occur on Sunday, Sept. 21, will not ...
Feb. 17’s new moon eclipses the sun and begins Lunar New Year, with Ramadan beginning the following day. Both are lunar ...
A rare total solar eclipse will cross Greenland, Iceland and Spain — Europe’s first mainland totality since 1999 — on Aug. 12 ...
Earth is about to see three total solar eclipses in just under two years, with each successive path of totality moving west ...
The first solar eclipse of 2026 is set to occur on February 17, marking a visually striking celestial event known as an ...
The skies will be putting on quite a show for the next three years. Here's what to know about the 'double eclipse cascade'.
As with all solar eclipses, astronomers strongly remind people to never look at the Sun without proper eye protection.
Totality will last for over six minutes.
The first solar eclipse of 2026 will be a rare annular eclipse forming a stunning ‘Ring of Fire’. While it will be visible in ...
The annular ‘Ring of Fire’ eclipse occurs on February 17, visible from Antarctica, southern Africa, and South America. Discover details.