Satellites have captured incredible views of the Feb. 17 annular solar eclipse as the moon's shadow swept across a remote ...
The wonder and awe of a solar eclipse, with the moon passing in between the Earth and Sun. Watch as a South Korean satellite captures the Earth going dark as a result of the annular eclipse.
Researchers at the University of Hawaiʻi have uncovered new clues about how energy moves through the sun's outer atmosphere, using one of nature's rarest events as their window: total solar eclipses.
South Korea’s GEO-KOMPSAT-2A satellite has shared breathtaking footage of the annular solar eclipse, popularly called the ...
India couldn't witness this spectacular event as it was visible only from remote regions of Antarctica and parts of southern ...
During the annular eclipse, the Moon aligned in front of the Sun and covered most of its surface, leaving only a thin circle ...
The "ring of fire" eclipse occurred as the moon passed centrally in front of the sun, blocking 96% of its disk and creating a ...
The solar eclipse on 17 February will be a Ring of Fire event. Live coverage will be available online via NASA and Google, allowing global audiences to safely witness the rare phenomenon.
Early on Tuesday, Feb. 26, a rare annular solar eclipse created a “ring of fire” over Antarctica, while South Africa and ...
Today’s annular solar eclipse will turn the sun into a blazing “ring of fire” for just over two minutes — but only a few places will see it fully.
From 2026 to 2028, Earth will see a double eclipse cascade: three total solar eclipses and three annular solar eclipses.
A stunning “ring of fire” eclipse was totally visible to a lucky few in the Southern Hemisphere. Here’s how to see the next one ...