The moon will cross in front of the sun for around four hours on Saturday, creating a partial solar eclipse that careful skygazers will be able to see in parts of the Northern Hemisphere.
The eclipse will stretch from eastern Canada to northern Russia, and potentially be visible in most of Europe and some areas of northeastern North America and northwest Africa, according to France’s Paris Observatory.
The eclipse will begin at 0850 GMT on Saturday and end at 1243 GMT.
The relatively rare celestial event occurs when the sun, moon, and Earth all line up. A total solar eclipse is when the moon totally blots out the sun, creating an eerie twilight.
But this time, the moon will cover at most 90% of the sun in some northern latitudes, turning the sun’s rays into “cold light,” Paris Observatory astronomer Florent Deleflie told AFP.
The maximum amount of eclipse will be visible in northeastern Canada and Greenland at 1047 GMT.
It will be less spectacular in other areas. In France, for example, between 10% to 30% of the sun’s disc will be obscured, depending on the region.
“The naked eye will not be able to see any difference,” Deleflie said.
Be careful
People wanting to see the moon apparently take a bite out of the sun will need to take precautions.
A partial solar eclipse behind the Taj Mahal in 2022.
Looking straight at the sun — during an eclipse or otherwise — can lead to irreversible vision loss.
“Using special glasses is one solution,” Deleflie said.
However, if the glasses are not new, even a slight defect or “microscopic hole” can cause eye damage, he warned, advising people to try observing an eclipse at a local astronomy observation center.
There, “you can safely verify the precision of celestial mechanics and marvel at interesting details on the sun’s surface, such as sunspots,” he said.
The partial eclipse will not turn up on a smartphone camera without a suitable filter, Deleflie added.
“The light is so intense that the obscured part won’t appear.”
The latest celestial show will come two weeks after skygazers across much of the world marveled at a rare total lunar eclipse, dubbed a “blood moon.”
An airplane flies past a partial solar eclipse on April 8, 2024.
Saturday’s partial solar eclipse will be the first of the year, and the 17th of this century.
A bigger one is coming — On August 12, 2026, a total solar eclipse will be visible in Iceland, northern Spain, and parts of Portugal.
More than 90% of the sun will also be obscured in parts of Europe including Britain, France, and Italy.
It will be the first total solar eclipse since one swept across North America in April 2024.
2025 AFP
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Partial solar eclipse in northern areas on Saturday (2025, March 26)