This week, the moon will completely cover the disk of the
sun, creating a solar eclipse that only a small part of the world can see.
The Friday, March 20 total solar eclipse
event will be the first since Nov. 3, 2013. The dark umbral shadow cone of the
moon will trace a curved path primarily over the North Atlantic and Arctic
Oceans, beginning off the southern tip of Greenland and then winding its way
counterclockwise to the northeast, passing between Iceland and the United
Kingdom.
The shadow will then pass over the Danish-owned Faroe Islands, the sparsely inhabited Norwegian island group of Svalbard and then it will hook counterclockwise toward the northwest, where it leaves the Earth's surface just short of the North Pole. [Solar Eclipses: An Observer's Guide (Infographic)]
This
image shows the total solar eclipse on July 11, 2010. The view was captured by
Imelda Joson and Edwin Aguirre from the Tatakoto Atoll in French Polynesia’s
Tuamotu Archipelago. There will be another total solar eclipse on March 20,
2015.
If you don't have the chance to see the solar eclipse in
person, you can catch it live online. The online Slooh
Community Observatory will broadcast live views of the solar eclipse through
its website Slooh.com, beginning at
4:30 a.m. EDT (0830 GMT).
You can also watch the total solar eclipse webcast
on Space.com on March 20, courtesy of Slooh.The Virtual Telescope
Project will also air live views of the eclipse through the project's website beginning at 4 a.m. EDT (0800 GMT), and it
will also be carried on Space.com if possible.
An artifact of the total eclipse will be a large partial
eclipse of the sun that will be visible across all of Europe, northern Africa
and much of northern Asia. Depending on where you are in Europe, you will see
anywhere from roughly 50 to nearly 99 percent of the sun's diameter eclipsed by
the moon.
You can find local eclipse times for cities in Europe
through eclipsewise.com. EclipseWise also has a map of eclipse times in the Atlantic, Africa
and Asia.
WARNING:If you're in the eclipse
zone, be very careful. Never look directly at the sun without special safety
equipment; permanent and serious eye damage could result. You can build a pinhole camera or solar projector
with binoculars to safely observe the eclipse.
Editor's Note: Skywatching columnist Joe
Rao plans to fly above any clouds on a specially chartered jet that will
attempt to rendezvous with the moon's shadow near the Faroes. Soon after the
eclipse is over, check back at Space.com for his report on the eclipse.
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