Rare solar eclipse takes place tonight over Antarctica - Action News
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Science

Rare solar eclipse takes place tonight over Antarctica

This year's first solar eclipse will appear as a ring of fire in the sky. Sadly, penguins in Antarctica will get the best view, but you'll be able to watch part of it online tonight.

Annular solar eclipse takes place over Antarctica at 2:03 ET

The year's first solar eclipse will appear as a spectacular ring of fire in the sky, but only when viewed from Eastern Antarctica.

The maximum annular solar eclipse takes place at 2:03 ET Tuesday morning. And while Antarctic penguins will get the best view, part of the eclipse will be visible to people living in Australia and southern Indonesia. There, the sun will become a blazing crescent in the sky.

The view from Australia will be streamed live online starting 2 a.m. ET by Slooh and the Virtual Telescope Project, two services that webcastimages from ground-based telescopes, along with expert commentary from astrophysicists and astronomers.

An annular solar eclipse is a type of total solar eclipse that takes place when the moon is further from the Earth than usual. That makesit appear relatively smaller so that itdoesn't cover the entire sun even at greatest eclipse. Tonight's eclipse is particularly rare because it's what's called a non-central eclipse, in which the central part of the moon's shadow missesthe Earth entirely in this case, if it missed by even a slightly bigger amount, there would be no total eclipse visible from Earth at all, and only a partial eclipse would be visible anywhere.

The next solar eclipse is a partial solar eclipse that will take place on Oct. 23 and will be visible across almost all of Canada except the Atlantic provinces.