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There is a solar eclipse happening on Monday, and many people have hopes of witnessing the rare phenomenon for themselves.
The total solar eclipse, when the moon entirely hides the sun, will only be viewable from places that fall within the path of totality, NASA has said, making those prime candidates for eclipse-watching spots. During the brief period of total sun coverage, it will get significantly darker.
“As long as a location is along the path of totality, then it basically all comes down to the weather – it needs to be not cloudy, at least in the patch of sky where the Sun will be when totality hits in the early to mid afternoon, in order to see the eclipse in all of its glory,” University of Richmond Physics Associate Professor Dr. Jack Singal told FOX Business of places best to view the eclipse.
According to the space agency, the total eclipse will first impact Texas and finally reach Maine as it travels across the continent in a northeastern direction.
Singal pointed out that Watertown, New York, is anticipating “sunny skies” while Del Rio, Texas, is expecting “cloudy skies” on the day of the eclipse, based on weather forecasts for Monday as of late Thursday afternoon. Both cities are situated along the expected path of the total eclipse.
Less than 72 hours away now from Path Of Totality (great rock band name if you ask me).
Our Eclipse forecast blog is here and will updated over the weekend: https://t.co/PDS0WVe6WM pic.twitter.com/GcPhqOZNUf
— Sean Ash (@SeanAshWX) April 5, 2024
The total solar eclipse on Monday will extend across 13 states with more than 30 million people living in the path of totality. @milesobrien asks @neiltyson what to expect and how to prepare for the spectacle. pic.twitter.com/ckBdM8TVFI
— PBS NewsHour (@NewsHour) April 5, 2024
This is actually pretty insane that the eclipse is passing over this exact path https://t.co/CJfpZ4ZtJa pic.twitter.com/0yayECTQLZ
— Bronxology (@MindBodyBronx) April 5, 2024
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