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A local solar eclipse will fall into coma in the sky this Saturday. Here is the method and location you can see.

Skygazers will be considered another celestial event, creating only a dazzling blood moon in the night sky during lunar eclipse. Some solar eclipses will create unique sunrises on Saturday, March 29, but are only visible in the northeastern United States, eastern Canada, West Africa and Europe.

Every year, there are two to five solar eclipses, and any type of partial eclipse can occur – partial, circular, total or hybrid – but the important factor is where it can be seen from the earth.

Partial eclipse will be seen in some way from Washington, D.C. and 13 states: Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Jersey, New York, New York, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Virginia and West Virginia.

The lucky audience will be the northeastern Maine, southwestern New Brunswick and eastern Canada’s Quebec will also be able to see a “double sunrise.” This happens when the outline of the moon makes the rising sun appear to be two “angles” floating out of the horizon.

Here is what will happen and how to view it safely.

What happens during some solar eclipse?

Partial solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes between the sun and the earth. As a result, the sun throws the shadow of the moon onto the earth, which will cover part of the northern hemisphere.

The reason it is not a complete solar eclipse like in April 2024 is not the sun, the moon and the earth will not be in perfect arrangement. According to NASA, for a partial solar eclipse on Saturday, the moon will only partially cover the sun, which will give it a crescent shape.

When can you see it?

Part of the solar eclipse in the northeastern United States will begin in the early hours of Saturday, around 4:50 ET and end before 8:43 ET.

This is a major U.S. city, and it is best to be able to see a local eclipse, and when you can see a partial eclipse with special viewing glasses. NASA added an asterisk next to sunrise time, indicating that some eclipse will begin at the time you can see.

  • Baltimore, Maryland (3% coverage): Partial eclipse can be seen at 6:55 a.m.* ending at 7:02 AM

  • Boston, Massachusetts (43% coverage): Partial eclipse can be seen at 6:31 a.m.*, ending at 7:07 a.m.

  • Buffalo, NY (2% coverage): Partial eclipse can be seen at 7:02 AM*, ending at 7:09 AM

  • New York, New York (22% reported): Partial solar eclipse can be seen at 6:44 am*; ended at 7:04 am

  • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (12% coverage): Partial eclipse can be seen at 6:49 a.m.* ends at 7:03 a.m.

  • Portland, Maine (64% coverage): Partial eclipse can be seen at 6:27 a.m.*, ending at 7:10 AM

  • Washington, DC (1% coverage): Partial eclipse can be seen at 6:56 a.m.* ending at 7:01 a.m.

How to view safely

In this multi-revealed photo, a partial solar eclipse was seen on the Portal Arch in St. Louis on August 21, 2017. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

NASA recommends Skygazers to watch some eclipse: “You must always see glasses (Eclipse glasses) or safe handheld solar viewers through safe solar power. Eclipse is not regular sunglasses; no matter how black it is; no black, no safe.”

The Space Administration also advises viewers not to see the sun through camera lenses, telescopes or binoculars while wearing solar glasses or using solar viewers, as it can expose people to potentially severe eye injuries. Special-purpose solar filters must be attached to the front of such optical devices in order to safely observe some solar eclipse, NASA said.

If you don’t have a pair of eclipse glasses or a handheld solar viewer, NASA says you can view it through indirect viewing methods such as creating a pinhole projector.


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