Millions expected to witness first widely visible total eclipse in Europe since 1999 Add as a preferred source on Google Millions of people across Europe, the North Atlantic and parts of the Arctic ...
Millions of people across North America, South America, and parts of Europe and Asia were treated to a rare total lunar eclipse on March 3, 2026. The full “Worm Moon” slipped into the Earth’s shadow, ...
SALT LAKE CITY — A rare celestial event will take place over the United States early Tuesday, but some Utahns will have a better chance to view it than others. A lunar eclipse — when the moon turns a ...
A rare occurrence will happen over Florida late tonight, or early tomorrow morning, depending on your perspective. March's full moon will coincide with a total lunar eclipse. Known as a blood moon, ...
Set your alarms, skywatchers. Arizona will see a total lunar eclipse in the predawn hours Tuesday, when March’s full moon turns a deep crimson. During the 2026 lunar eclipse on March 3, the moon will ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. An award-winning reporter writing about stargazing and the night sky. March 2026 brings one of the year’s most dramatic ...
People in Maine, parts of Canada, New Brunswick and Quebec saw a “devil’s horns” partial solar eclipse March 29, 2025. Weather permitting and depending on the phase, a “diamond ring” effect during a ...
Well, folks, the eclipses are eclipsing. Between February 17 and March 3rd, we are in the throes of an eclipse corridor, when odds of the unexpected are high and shocking changes ride shotgun, think ...
On Tuesday parts of the Southern Hemisphere were graced by a “ring of fire” solar eclipse—a celestial marvel that occurs when the moon is at or near its farthest distance from Earth and passes ...
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 ...
A “ring of fire” solar eclipse on Tuesday will mark the first eclipse of 2026, but only about 2% of the world’s population will get to see it, according to Time and Date. The event, also called an ...